---
name: managing-out-of-court-workout-processes
language: en
description: Structures exchange offers, consent solicitations, and amend-and-extend transactions as Chapter 11 alternatives. Use when managing out-of-court workouts, designing exchange offers, or structuring pre-negotiated deals.
tags:
  - management
  - distressed-and-restructuring
metadata:
  author: casemark
  practice_areas:
    - Restructuring
    - Distressed Investing
    - Turnaround
  document_types:
    - Management Report
  skill_modes:
    - Management
    - Coordination
---
# Managing Out Of Court Workout Processes

## When To Use

- A borrower or issuer faces a near-term maturity wall, covenant breach, or liquidity shortfall but the capital structure may be fixable without Chapter 11
- Stakeholders are evaluating an exchange offer, consent solicitation, amend-and-extend, or liability management transaction (LMT) as a restructuring path
- An ad hoc creditor group or company-side advisor needs a coordination framework to track transaction mechanics, consent thresholds, and holdout risk
- A pre-negotiated or pre-packaged deal is being designed with the goal of minimizing time in court or avoiding filing entirely

## Inputs To Gather

- **Capital structure detail**: Debt instruments (term loans, revolvers, bonds, converts), maturity dates, coupon rates, outstanding balances, and priority/subordination waterfall
- **Credit agreement provisions**: Minimum consent thresholds for amendments, required lender vote percentages, no-action clauses, collective action clauses (CACs), anti-layering covenants, and restricted payments baskets [VERIFY against each indenture/credit agreement]
- **Liquidity picture**: Cash on hand, revolver availability, near-term cash burn, upcoming interest/principal payments, and any DIP or bridge financing proposals
- **Stakeholder map**: Identity and estimated holdings of key creditor groups (ad hoc groups, CLOs, distressed funds, crossover holders), inter-creditor dynamics, and any cooperation agreement terms
- **Company financials**: Trailing and projected EBITDA, free cash flow forecasts, asset appraisals, and any independent business review (IBR) or CRO assessment
- **Regulatory/tax constraints**: SEC registration requirements for exchange offers, Tax Code Section 108 cancellation-of-debt income implications, and any non-U.S. scheme or restructuring plan requirements [VERIFY jurisdiction-specific rules]

## Workflow

### 1. Assess Feasibility of Out-of-Court Resolution

- Compare total funded debt against realistic enterprise value range to determine whether the capital structure is fixable via a workout or requires a more comprehensive restructuring
- Identify the "fulcrum security" — the tranche where value breaks — and assess whether holders of that tranche are likely to engage constructively
- Evaluate consent thresholds: typical bond indentures require 90%+ for principal reduction; credit agreements often need simple or two-thirds majority [VERIFY specific instrument thresholds]
- Flag holdout risk — if a blocking position exists or free-rider dynamics are likely, assess whether exit consents or coercive mechanics are viable

### 2. Select Transaction Structure

- **Exchange offer**: Existing debt exchanged for new instruments (new notes, equity, or combination) — use when principal reduction or maturity extension is needed and consent thresholds are achievable
- **Consent solicitation**: Amend credit document terms (strip covenants, extend maturity, modify payment terms) without exchanging the paper — use when document flexibility exists and majority consent is available
- **Amend-and-extend (A&E)**: Extend maturities and potentially reprice — use when the business is fundamentally sound but faces a maturity wall
- **Uptier / drop-down LMT**: Move collateral or priority claims to a new tranche — evaluate carefully given litigation risk (e.g., Serta, Boardriders precedents) [VERIFY current case law status]
- **Combination / multi-step**: Layer exchange offer with consent solicitation to strip protections from non-participating holders

### 3. Structure the Transaction Mechanics

- Draft term sheet covering: new instrument terms, exchange ratio or consideration, early-bird incentives (early tender premium, typically 25–50 bps), minimum participation conditions, and withdrawal rights
- Design consent solicitation mechanics: identify operative provisions to be amended, draft supplemental indenture or amendment language, and set record date
- Determine SEC compliance path: Rule 144A exchange vs. registered exchange offer vs. Section 3(a)(9) exemption [VERIFY applicable exemption based on holder composition]
- Model COD income exposure and structure consideration to minimize taxable gain (e.g., use of "significant modification" rules under Treas. Reg. § 1.1001-3)

### 4. Manage the Process

- Establish a deal timeline: launch → early tender deadline → expiration → settlement (typically 20–30 business days for exchange offers)
- Coordinate with information agent, exchange agent, and trustee on mechanics
- Track participation levels in real time; maintain creditor communication cadence
- Prepare fallback plan if minimum thresholds are not met: extend deadline, sweeten terms, or pivot to pre-packaged Chapter 11 filing
- Monitor for creditor-on-creditor aggression or litigation threats that could derail the consensual track

### 5. Close and Implement

- Verify final participation/consent levels against required thresholds
- Execute supplemental indentures, amended credit agreements, or new note issuances
- Settle exchanges and distribute new consideration
- Update capital structure model, rating agency communications, and disclosure filings
- Document lessons learned and any remaining stub positions that may require future attention

## Output

- **Process management report** summarizing: transaction structure selected, consent/participation thresholds and actual results, timeline of key milestones, and any deviations from plan
- **Stakeholder summary matrix** mapping creditor groups to holdings, consent status, and engagement posture
- **Transaction term sheet** or summary of amended/exchanged instrument terms
- **Risk register** cataloging holdout risk, litigation exposure, regulatory filing requirements, and tax implications
- **Fallback analysis** documenting the Chapter 11 alternative path with estimated timeline and cost comparison

## Quality Checks

- Consent threshold math ties to governing documents — do not rely on generic percentages; confirm exact requirements per instrument [VERIFY]
- Exchange consideration and early-bird premiums are modeled against recovery analysis to confirm economic rationality for participating holders
- SEC exemption analysis is documented and supportable — not assumed
- COD income and tax consequences are flagged with specific dollar estimates where possible
- Holdout scenarios are stress-tested: what happens at 75%, 85%, 95% participation?
- Fallback to Chapter 11 is not just mentioned but actually modeled with comparative timeline, cost, and recovery estimates
- All inter-creditor dynamics and cooperation agreement restrictions are accounted for in the participation forecast
