Financial restructuring
The substantive turnaround the moratorium’s breathing space is there to make possible.
Financial restructuringA distressed but viable company is otherwise at the mercy of whichever creditor acts first, and one enforcement can trigger a cascade that destroys a business that could have been saved. The composition moratorium freezes that: a court-supervised shelter that suspends enforcement while the company reorganises or agrees a composition with its creditors. We assess whether it fits, prepare the application and the restructuring plan, advise on a discreet provisional stage, and guide the company through to recovery or an orderly composition.
Court-supervised; enforcement suspended.
The composition moratorium (Nachlassstundung) is a court-supervised process under the debt-enforcement law that shields a company from enforcement while it reorganises or negotiates a composition agreement. The court grants it and appoints an administrator to supervise; most enforcement is suspended. It is the principal court tool, short of bankruptcy, for rescuing a company that needs protection and time, and it can be sought instead of bankruptcy when the board faces over-indebtedness under the Code of Obligations but a restructuring has real prospects.
The moratorium protects a financial restructuring, follows the over-indebtedness duties, and is the rescue alternative to bankruptcy.
The moratorium gives fast protection first, then commits to the longer process once viability is assessed, aiming at recovery or a composition.
| Element | What it does |
|---|---|
| Provisional stage | Fast protection while prospects are assessed |
| Definitive stage | Longer period to execute the restructuring |
| Administrator | Supervises, approves, reports to court |
| Outcome | Recovery, or a confirmed composition |
During the moratorium the board generally keeps running the business, under the administrator’s supervision and the court’s limits. The whole thing succeeds or fails on the credibility of the underlying restructuring and the case put to the administrator, court and creditors. We focus our work there.
Assess the fit, prepare the application and plan, work with the administrator, and shape the composition to confirmation.
Judging honestly whether the company is viable and whether a moratorium is the right route.
Building the restructuring plan and figures that make the application credible, discreetly where possible.
Engaging constructively with the court-appointed administrator and presenting the case well.
Negotiating a composition acceptable to creditors and viable for the company, toward court confirmation.
Keeping the directors’ duties in view, so the process protects the board as well as the business.
The cost reflects the complexity of the restructuring, the number of creditors, the length of the moratorium and the administrator’s involvement. It is weighed against the alternative, a value-destroying collapse, which for a genuinely viable company makes the protected process the better economics for the company and its creditors alike.
We scope and quote against the situation. Pricing is on request.
Discuss the moratoriumA moratorium that actually rescues the company rests on:
The protection a moratorium gives is real but conditional: it buys time and shelter for a viable company to restructure, not a rescue for a business that is not viable. Sought for a company whose underlying economics are broken, or sought too late as a last gasp, it mostly postpones the outcome while consuming time, cost and goodwill, and can still end in bankruptcy or a composition with assignment of assets. This is why the honest viability assessment comes first, before the application, not after the moratorium has failed. Where the business is viable and the timing right, the moratorium gives it a real chance the open market would not. Where it is not, we say so.
Assessing the fit honestly, preparing the application and plan, working with the administrator and shaping the composition to confirmation is the work this firm does.
A restructuring plan and figures that make the application credible to the administrator, the court and the creditors.
Advice on using a non-public provisional stage, so the business’s relationships are protected as far as the process allows.
A candid viability assessment first: the moratorium pursued where there is real prospect, not to defer the inevitable.
The substantive turnaround the moratorium’s breathing space is there to make possible.
Financial restructuringThe duties under which a moratorium can be sought instead of notifying for bankruptcy.
Over-indebtedness (Art. 725 CO)The terminal route a failed moratorium can lead to, handled to protect directors.
Bankruptcy proceedingsTell us the position. A partner assesses whether a moratorium fits, prepares the application and plan, and guides the company through the process.