TY - BOOK AU - Wan,Wai Yee TI - Court-supervised restructuring of large distressed companies in Asia: law and policy T2 - Contemporary Studies in Corporate Law SN - 9781509952366 AV - HG3769.A7814 .W263 2022eb U1 - 338.83095 23 PY - 2022/// CY - London [England] PB - Hart Publishing KW - Corporate reorganizations KW - Asia KW - Bankruptcy KW - Business failures KW - Law and legislation KW - Electronic books N1 - 1. Introduction and Theoretical Framework -- 2. Overview of Insolvency and Restructuring Law and Policy in Mainland China, India, Hong Kong and Singapore -- 3. Agency Costs of Manager-Creditor and Shareholder-Creditor Relationships -- 4. Agency Costs of Creditor-Creditor Relationships -- 5. Non-Performing Loans and Non-Bankruptcy Rules -- 6. Role of the Insolvency Practitioner in Restructurings: Strengths and Limitations -- 7. Role of the Courts in Restructurings: Strengths and Limitations -- 8. Reforms to Law and Policy of Restructuring in Asia -- 9. Conclusion; Abstract freely available; full-text restricted to individual document purchasers N2 - "This book provides an in-depth analysis of 4 economically significant Asian jurisdictions: Mainland China, India, Hong Kong and Singapore. These jurisdictions have recently either reformed - or are considering reforming - their corporate restructuring laws to promote regimes conducive to restructuring financially distressed, but otherwise economically viable, companies. Mainland China, India, Hong Kong and Singapore continue to adhere to a framework that requires the court's final approval but draw references from Chapter 11 of the Bankruptcy Code 1978 in the United States and/or the schemes of arrangement in the United Kingdom. However, the institutional and market structures are very different in Asia; in particular, Asia has far higher concentration in shareholdings among listed firms, including holdings by families and the state, and different composition of creditors. The book explains how, notwithstanding the legal transplantation, corporate restructuring laws in these Asian jurisdictions have adapted and evolved due to the frictions in shareholder-creditor and the creditor-creditor relationships, and the role of the state in resolving non-performing loans and financial distress of state-owned enterprises which are listed, or which issue public debt. The study argues that any reforms must go beyond professionalising the insolvency professionals and the judiciary but must be designed to address fundamental issues of corporate governance, bank regulation and enforcing non-bankruptcy rules. It offers invaluable insights for academics and policy makers alike."-- UR - https://doi.org/10.5040/9781509952366?locatt=label:secondary_bloomsburyCollections ER -