---
name: preparing-disclosure-statement-analysis
language: en
description: Evaluates Chapter 11 disclosure statements with plan description adequacy, feasibility projections, and liquidation analysis comparison. Use when reviewing disclosure statements, analyzing plan feasibility, or preparing objections.
tags:
  - preparation
  - distressed-and-restructuring
metadata:
  author: casemark
  practice_areas:
    - Restructuring
    - Distressed Investing
    - Turnaround
  document_types:
    - Preparation Document
  skill_modes:
    - Preparation
---
# Preparing Disclosure Statement Analysis

## When To Use

- Reviewing a debtor's disclosure statement before a §1125 adequacy hearing
- Preparing objections on behalf of creditors, equity holders, or committees
- Evaluating plan feasibility projections for an investor considering a claim purchase or plan sponsorship
- Comparing the proposed plan's recoveries against a hypothetical Chapter 7 liquidation
- Advising a client (lender, bondholder, trade creditor) on whether to vote for or against a plan

## Inputs To Gather

- **Disclosure statement** and all exhibits (financial projections, liquidation analysis, valuation reports)
- **Plan of reorganization** (or summary of plan terms if full plan is not yet filed)
- **Schedules and SOFA** (Statements of Financial Affairs) from the bankruptcy filing
- **Monthly operating reports (MORs)** for trend analysis of debtor's post-petition performance
- **Claims register** or claims summary — secured, priority, administrative, general unsecured, equity
- **Debtor's prepetition financials** (audited or unaudited 2–3 years) for baseline comparison
- **Independent valuation or appraisal reports**, if filed separately from the disclosure statement
- **Key case orders** — DIP financing, cash collateral, critical vendor, 363 sales
- **Stakeholder identity** — which constituency the analysis serves (secured lender, unsecured creditor committee, equity, potential plan sponsor)

## Workflow

1. **Assess "adequate information" under §1125(a)**
   - Confirm the disclosure statement describes the plan's classification structure, treatment of each class, and means for implementation
   - Check for description of the debtor's history, business operations, and reasons for filing
   - Verify disclosure of insider transactions, management compensation, and related-party dealings
   - Identify material omissions — missing risk factors, undisclosed litigation, or unexplained assumptions [VERIFY against local court's adequacy standards, which vary by jurisdiction]

2. **Analyze financial projections**
   - Compare revenue and EBITDA assumptions against historical performance in the MORs and prepetition financials
   - Stress-test key drivers: revenue growth rate, margin assumptions, capex requirements, working capital needs
   - Flag hockey-stick projections — where year-1 reorganized performance sharply diverges from recent actuals without clear operational justification
   - Evaluate the discount rate or multiple used for enterprise valuation; compare to comparable-company benchmarks
   - Assess the debtor's projected ability to service exit financing and plan consideration payments

3. **Evaluate the liquidation analysis (§1129(a)(7) "best interests" test)**
   - Confirm all material asset categories are included (real property, equipment, IP, avoidance actions, causes of action)
   - Check recovery assumptions for each asset class against orderly-liquidation and forced-sale benchmarks
   - Verify Chapter 7 administrative cost estimates (trustee fees at statutory rates, wind-down costs, professional fees) [VERIFY statutory trustee fee schedule under §326]
   - Compare per-class recoveries under the plan to per-class recoveries in liquidation
   - Identify classes where liquidation arguably yields equal or higher recovery — these are potential objection vectors

4. **Review classification and treatment**
   - Map each claim type to its plan class; flag any gerrymandering (splitting similar claims into separate classes to manufacture an accepting class)
   - Confirm priority claims (§507) receive required treatment under §1129(a)(9)
   - Check for unfair discrimination among classes of equal rank
   - Evaluate whether any impaired class is being asked to accept treatment below the liquidation floor

5. **Assess feasibility (§1129(a)(11))**
   - Determine whether the reorganized debtor can meet ongoing obligations without a likely need for subsequent liquidation or further reorganization
   - Review capital structure post-emergence: leverage ratios, debt service coverage, liquidity cushion
   - Evaluate management and governance changes — is the same team that drove distress running the reorganized entity?
   - Assess contingent liabilities (pending litigation, environmental, pension) that could undermine projected performance

6. **Identify confirmation objection grounds**
   - Summarize potential §1129(a) objection bases: inadequate information, best-interests failure, unfair discrimination, lack of feasibility, bad faith
   - For cram-down scenarios (§1129(b)), evaluate whether the plan satisfies "fair and equitable" and "does not discriminate unfairly" for each rejecting class
   - Note any unresolved claim disputes that could shift voting outcomes

## Output

Structure the analysis as follows:

- **Executive Summary** — one-page overview of key findings, recommended position (support/object/negotiate), and critical risks
- **Adequacy of Information** — section-by-section assessment of disclosure completeness, with specific omissions flagged
- **Projection Analysis** — table comparing debtor projections to historical actuals and stress-case scenarios; highlight key sensitivities
- **Liquidation Comparison** — side-by-side recovery matrix (plan vs. Chapter 7) by class, with notes on disputed assumptions
- **Classification & Treatment Review** — class-by-class analysis with flags for gerrymandering, unfair discrimination, or priority violations
- **Feasibility Assessment** — qualitative and quantitative evaluation of post-emergence viability
- **Objection Points** — prioritized list of potential objection grounds with supporting analysis and case law references [VERIFY case law citations against current circuit authority]
- **Recommendation** — actionable next steps for the client, including negotiation leverage points

## Quality Checks

- Every material projection assumption is compared to at least one objective benchmark (historical data, industry comp, or third-party report)
- Liquidation analysis covers all asset categories disclosed in the schedules; no unexplained exclusions
- Each plan class is evaluated for both the best-interests test and feasibility
- Stakeholder-specific bias is explicit — the analysis states whose perspective it adopts
- All jurisdiction-dependent standards are marked [VERIFY] (e.g., local adequacy rules, trustee fee calculations, circuit-specific cram-down precedent)
- No unsupported legal conclusions — factual findings are separated from legal arguments
- Financial figures cross-check between the disclosure statement, the plan, and the MORs for internal consistency
