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2014

Track B: Revenue and Cash Flow Forecasting

This session will outline methods of developing meaningful and timely revenue and cash flow forecasts for financially distressed businesses, including considerations that management takes into account in developing its forecast, commentary on relevant case law concerning such matters, and factors that could be considered by interested third parties and practitioners regarding the reasonableness of such projections, such as modeling techniques.
2 hour 10 seconds

Track A: Valuation Basics

This session will take a look at different valuation techniques, including asset approaches, market approaches and income approaches. Concepts such as time value of money, discounted cash flows, determining the discount rate and cost of capital, and terminal value assumptions will be illustrated. Comparable companies and precedent transactions to establish the relative enterprise and equity value of firms will also be examined and discussed.

Track A: Accounting and Finance Basics

This session will cover revenue and expense recognition, financial statement analysis, financial ratios, and the calculation and forecasting of a firm’s free cash flow.
1 hour 13 minutes 58 seconds

Valuation: Bankruptcy Lawyers Are Litigators, Too!

This panel will discuss how to examine and cross-examine an expert witness and respond to judges. Through a fact pattern/role-playing approach, the panel will cover issues related to valuation and plan confirmation.

Distribution Issues and Other Tensions in Ponzi Scheme Cases

This panel is devoted to four interrelated topics in Ponzi scheme cases, including (1) distribution methodology issues; (2) criminal vs. civil forfeiture; (3) the tension between U.S. and non-U.S. distribution schemes; and (4) additional issues, including collateral source recovery and the ability to assert personal jurisdiction over extraterritorial plaintiffs to enjoin proceedings that, if brought in the U.S., would violate the automatic stay.
NO CLE

Chapter 13: Updates and Developments — Part 2

Everything that’s hot and not in chapter 13 practice, including mortgage-stripping, proof-of-claim wars, Kagenveama bites the dust, early pay-offs, modification anarchy and more.
NO CLE

Chapter 13: Updates and Developments — Part 1

Everything that’s hot and not in chapter 13 practice, including mortgage-stripping, proof-of-claim wars, Kagenveama bites the dust, early pay-offs, modification anarchy and more.

Discovery and Evidence Issues; Post-Judgment Motions; Appeals and Motions to Stay Pending Appeal; New Local Bankruptcy Rules and Updates

This panel will discuss practice tips during the pre-trial discovery period, as well as during the trial itself, related to the handling of evidence and objections thereto; discuss the proper use of post-judgment motions related to reconsideration and requests to amend findings of fact and conclusions of law; explain the appeals process, including motions for stay pending appeal; and explain certain important local rules, as well as updates that have occurred and those that will be coming.

The Outer Limits (of U.S. Bankruptcy Court Jurisdiction)

This panel will explore the ethical considerations and best practices available to attorneys and financial advisors to financially distressed businesses looking to eschew their home court in favor of a U.S. court and the chapter 11 remedy. On the flip side, this panel will also explore the ethical considerations and best practices available to attorneys and financial advisors to creditor constituencies who are trying to keep a case at home and as far away as possible from a U.S. court administering chapter 11. In our age of globalization, where a case is administered can make all the difference; consequently, forum-shopping is often a major consideration for advisors. Advisors to financially distressed companies must ask themselves which practices are ethically appropriate and which are not, as well as which practices “work” to create U.S. jurisdiction and which are not as effective. Conversely, advisors to creditor constituencies must ask themselves what practices are ethically appropriate and most effective to keep a case at home and away from chapter 11.