Ahcom v. Smeding – Altered Egos Redux Last month, this blog featured a preliminary post on Ahcom Ltd. v. Smeding (9th Cir. Oct.... Share on:
Altered Egos – Part 2: Trust Busters About a month ago, the Ninth Circuit clarified and restated the ability of individual creditors... Share on:
Fraudulent Transfers By The Numbers – Revisited Back in May, this blog featured a post on some preliminary research addressing the idea of... Share on:
Altered Egos – The Ninth Circuit Weighs in (Again) On Whether Individual Creditors Can Pursue Their Own “Alter Ego” Claims Against a Bankrupt Entity’s Principals Whenever a troubled business seeks bankruptcy protection, unsecured creditors are often left scrambling to find... Share on:
Preference Defense and the “Ordinary Course of Business” – It’s All In the Numbers Most readers of this blog are aware that, under the Bankruptcy Code, a Chapter 11... Share on:
Solvency Analysis in Preference Litigation Last week's post discussed public-market data as the benchmark for solvency in assessing fraudulent transfers. This... Share on:
Fraudulent Transfer Litigation – A New Use for Credit Default Swaps? Credit Default Swaps - those largely unregulated "side bets" over the likelihood of specific companies defaulting... Share on:
A New Type of Government Refund: Criminal Restitution Payments Recoverable as Preferential Transfers From the 9th Circuit last week, a decision providing creditors and their representatives with a potentially... Share on:
Southern California – America’s Small Business Bankruptcy Leader In a globalized business environment, it should be no surprise that some of the more... Share on:
“Comity Is Not Just A One-Way Street” International readers of this blog - and those in the US who practice internationally -... Share on: