---
name: analyzing-section-363-asset-sales
language: en
description: Evaluates 363 sale processes with stalking horse protections, bid procedures, and credit bidding mechanics. Use when analyzing 363 sales, structuring stalking horse bids, or evaluating asset sale alternatives.
tags:
  - analysis
  - distressed-and-restructuring
  - credit
metadata:
  author: casemark
  practice_areas:
    - Restructuring
    - Distressed Investing
    - Turnaround
  document_types:
    - Analysis Report
  skill_modes:
    - Analysis
---
# Analyzing Section 363 Asset Sales

## When To Use

- Evaluating whether a Section 363 sale is the optimal disposition path versus a plan sale, Article 9 foreclosure, or assignment for benefit of creditors
- Analyzing stalking horse bid terms, break-up fees, and overbid protections for reasonableness
- Assessing credit bidding rights and potential limitations under Section 363(k)
- Reviewing bid procedures orders for competitive dynamics and procedural fairness
- Advising distressed investors on bidding strategy, timing, and deal structuring in a 363 auction
- Evaluating "free and clear" transfer provisions and the treatment of successor liability, liens, and encumbrances

## Inputs To Gather

- **Debtor filings**: Sale motion, proposed bid procedures order, stalking horse APA (if any), declaration in support of sale
- **Asset details**: Description of assets being sold, recent appraisals or valuations, financial performance of the business unit or asset pool
- **Capital structure**: Prepetition and DIP lender agreements, intercreditor agreements, UCC filings, and lien priority waterfall
- **Bid information**: Stalking horse bid terms, competing bids received, qualified bidder list, deposit requirements
- **Court orders**: Any prior orders on bid procedures, sale objection deadlines, and auction scheduling
- **Market context**: Comparable 363 sale transactions, industry conditions, and time-sensitivity factors (e.g., melting ice cube, regulatory windows)

## Workflow

1. **Assess sale rationale and alternatives**
   - Determine why a 363 sale is proposed over a plan sale or other disposition method
   - Evaluate whether the debtor has demonstrated a sound business justification [VERIFY: jurisdiction-specific standards for 363(b) sales outside the ordinary course]
   - Identify whether the sale is a going-concern or piecemeal liquidation, and implications for valuation

2. **Analyze stalking horse protections**
   - Review break-up fee and expense reimbursement as a percentage of purchase price (typical range: 1-3% break-up fee; flag if above 3-4%)
   - Evaluate bid protections for chilling effect on competitive bidding
   - Assess minimum overbid increments — are they set to encourage genuine competition or entrench the stalking horse?
   - Identify any deal-lock provisions, no-shop clauses, or matching rights

3. **Evaluate bid procedures and auction mechanics**
   - Confirm bid qualification criteria: deposit amount, proof of financing, marked-up APA requirements
   - Review auction format (open, sealed, hybrid) and rules for successive rounds
   - Assess timeline adequacy — sufficient marketing period, diligence access, and objection windows [VERIFY: local rules on minimum notice periods]
   - Identify any provisions that may disadvantage competing bidders (e.g., excessive information asymmetry, restricted diligence)

4. **Analyze credit bidding dynamics**
   - Determine which secured creditors hold rights to credit bid under Section 363(k)
   - Assess whether the debtor or any party has sought to limit credit bidding for "cause" and evaluate the strength of that argument [VERIFY: circuit-specific precedent on 363(k) limitations — RadLAX Gateway Hotel is baseline]
   - Model the impact of credit bidding on auction competitiveness and recovery to the estate
   - Evaluate intercreditor agreement provisions that may affect credit bidding allocation among lender groups

5. **Review "free and clear" transfer terms**
   - Confirm which interests, liens, claims, and encumbrances are being stripped under Section 363(f)
   - Assess whether all five conditions of 363(f) are satisfied for each interest being extinguished
   - Identify successor liability risks that may survive a 363 sale (environmental liabilities, certain tax claims, product liability under state law) [VERIFY: state-specific successor liability doctrines]
   - Review cure cost obligations for assumed and assigned contracts/leases under Sections 365(b) and (f)

6. **Assess valuation and recovery**
   - Compare stalking horse price to appraised values, comparable transactions, and liquidation analysis
   - Model waterfall distributions to creditor classes from projected sale proceeds
   - Evaluate whether the sale process is likely to maximize value for the estate
   - Flag any potential Section 363(n) concerns (collusive bidding)

## Output

Produce a structured analysis report containing:

- **Executive summary**: Sale type, key assets, stalking horse price, and primary findings
- **Sale rationale assessment**: Whether the 363 path is justified with supporting analysis
- **Stalking horse evaluation**: Bid protections analysis with market benchmarking
- **Bid procedures review**: Competitiveness assessment and procedural adequacy
- **Credit bidding analysis**: Rights mapping, limitation risks, and auction impact
- **Free-and-clear analysis**: Lien stripping adequacy and successor liability exposure
- **Valuation and recovery summary**: Proceeds waterfall and value-maximization opinion
- **Risk factors and open items**: Flagged issues requiring further diligence or court resolution

## Quality Checks

- Confirm all stalking horse protection percentages are calculated against the correct base (purchase price vs. enterprise value)
- Verify that credit bidding analysis accounts for the full secured claim amount, not just outstanding principal
- Ensure successor liability analysis covers both federal and applicable state doctrines
- Cross-check bid procedure timelines against Bankruptcy Rule 2002 and local court requirements [VERIFY]
- Validate that the 363(f) analysis addresses each subsection (a) through (e) individually for each lien or interest
- Confirm that any "good faith purchaser" protection analysis under 363(m) is included for mootness risk assessment
- Flag any assumptions about valuation with explicit data sources or mark as [VERIFY]
