---
name: structuring-debtor-in-possession-financing
language: en
description: Designs DIP financing structures with priming liens, adequate protection, and budget milestones for Chapter 11 proceedings. Use when structuring DIP facilities, analyzing superpriority claims, or evaluating DIP terms.
tags:
  - distressed-and-restructuring
metadata:
  author: casemark
  practice_areas:
    - Restructuring
    - Distressed Investing
    - Turnaround
  document_types:
    - Report
  skill_modes:
    - Analysis
---
# Structuring Debtor In Possession Financing

Designs DIP financing structures with priming liens, adequate protection, and budget milestones for Chapter 11 proceedings.

## When To Use

- Structuring a new-money DIP facility (revolving, term, or hybrid) for a Chapter 11 debtor
- Evaluating whether a proposed DIP credit agreement contains market terms or overreaches
- Analyzing adequate protection packages offered to pre-petition secured creditors being primed
- Building or stress-testing a DIP budget and milestone schedule
- Comparing roll-up DIP structures versus new-money-only facilities
- Advising on superpriority claim priority (§364(c)) and priming lien authorization (§364(d))

## Inputs To Gather

- **Pre-petition capital structure**: Outstanding secured debt (first lien, second lien, mezzanine), unsecured claims, and intercreditor agreements
- **Collateral package**: Asset appraisals, lien perfection status, and existing equity cushion analysis
- **Cash-flow forecast**: 13-week (or longer) cash-flow projection showing liquidity needs, working-capital swings, and seasonal patterns
- **Case milestones**: Target plan confirmation timeline, sale process dates (§363), or conversion triggers
- **DIP term sheet / credit agreement**: Proposed terms including facility size, interest rate, fees, maturity, covenants, events of default, and carve-out provisions
- **Pre-petition lender consent or opposition**: Positions of existing secured creditors on priming and adequate protection
- **Proposed budget**: Detailed line-item DIP budget with variance tolerances

## Workflow

1. **Map the pre-petition lien waterfall.** Identify each tier of secured claims, confirm perfection and priority, and calculate the equity cushion (or deficit) in the collateral base. Flag any cross-collateralization or cross-default provisions in existing credit documents.

2. **Size the DIP facility.** Tie facility size to the 13-week cash-flow forecast plus a liquidity buffer. Distinguish between new-money needs and any roll-up component. If the DIP lender proposes rolling up pre-petition debt, quantify the dollar amount being elevated to superpriority status and assess whether roll-up is proportionate to new money advanced.

3. **Structure priority and liens.**
   - §364(a)/(b): Unsecured credit in the ordinary course — rarely sufficient for meaningful financing.
   - §364(c): Superpriority administrative claim, senior or equal lien on unencumbered assets, or junior lien on encumbered assets.
   - §364(d): Priming lien — requires showing existing lienholders are adequately protected.
   - Determine which combination the debtor needs and draft the lien structure accordingly.

4. **Design the adequate protection package.** For each class of pre-petition secured creditor being primed, specify:
   - Replacement liens (on what collateral, at what priority)
   - Periodic cash payments (current-pay interest, fees)
   - Superpriority administrative claim under §507(b) as a backstop
   - Equity cushion analysis demonstrating collateral coverage [VERIFY: court-specific standards for equity cushion adequacy vary by circuit]

5. **Set budget and milestone covenants.**
   - Define DIP budget testing frequency (weekly or bi-weekly variance reporting)
   - Set permitted variance tolerances (typically ±10–15% on receipts, ±10–15% on disbursements on a cumulative rolling basis)
   - Tie milestone dates to case events: filing of plan/disclosure statement, §363 bid deadline, auction date, plan confirmation, effective date
   - Include default triggers if milestones are missed beyond any grace period

6. **Evaluate key protective provisions.**
   - **Carve-out**: Confirm professional fee carve-out covers debtor's counsel, committee counsel, and UST fees; verify it includes both a pre-trigger and post-trigger amount [VERIFY: local practice on carve-out sizing]
   - **Challenge period**: Duration for the committee (or other parties) to challenge pre-petition lien validity (typically 60–75 days)
   - **Credit bidding rights**: Whether the DIP lender retains §363(k) credit-bid rights and any limitations
   - **Events of default**: Review for hair-trigger defaults (e.g., appointment of an examiner, filing of a competing plan) that could give the DIP lender disproportionate case control
   - **Waiver provisions**: Flag any waivers of surcharge rights under §506(c) or marshaling

7. **Stress-test the structure.** Model downside scenarios — revenue shortfall, delayed sale, plan rejection — and assess whether the DIP facility provides sufficient runway. Evaluate what happens at maturity if conversion or dismissal occurs.

## Output

Produce a **DIP Financing Structure Report** containing:

- **Executive summary**: Facility overview (size, type, lender, key economic terms)
- **Lien waterfall diagram**: Pre-petition vs. post-DIP priority stack, showing where new money and any roll-up sit
- **Adequate protection analysis**: For each primed creditor class, the proposed package and sufficiency assessment
- **Budget and milestones table**: Line-item budget with variance tolerances and milestone dates with cure/default mechanics
- **Key terms matrix**: Side-by-side comparison of proposed terms against market benchmarks (pricing, covenants, carve-out, challenge period)
- **Risk flags**: Provisions that may face court objection, committee challenge, or UST opposition
- **Recommendations**: Suggested modifications to terms, alternative structures, or negotiation leverage points

## Quality Checks

- Confirm all lien priorities are consistent with the Bankruptcy Code sections cited (§364(c) vs. §364(d)) and match the proposed credit agreement language
- Verify adequate protection proposals cover every class of pre-petition secured creditor being primed or subordinated
- Ensure DIP budget ties to the cash-flow forecast and that variance tolerances are internally consistent
- Check that milestone dates are realistic against the court's scheduling order and local rules [VERIFY: district-specific case timeline expectations]
- Confirm carve-out amounts are sufficient to fund professional fees through a contested confirmation or conversion
- Flag any provisions that would constitute impermissible sub rosa plan treatment or case-dispositive control by the DIP lender
- Cross-check roll-up amounts against the §364 authorization being sought — courts increasingly scrutinize roll-ups that lack adequate justification
