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Analysis of the use of a cross-border insolvency protocol between estate representatives in the US and Bermuda

May 14, 2024

Article
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KEY TAKEAWAYS:

  • SCPSIs need to provide full disclosures on operations and assets, conduct regular stress tests, and have plans for crisis management and orderly shutdowns to ensure investor protection

  • Creating these protocols involves addressing legal recognition and cooperation challenges between courts in different countries

  • They also improve inter-court communication and provide a clear framework for managing complex cross-border insolvencies

This article first appeared in Volume 22, Issue 1 of International Corporate Rescue and is reprinted with the permission of Chase Cambria Publishing

www.chasecambria.com

Steven White and John McSweeney from the Insolvency and Dispute Resolution Group at Walkers, discuss the use of a cross-border insolvency protocol between estate representatives in the United States and Bermuda. 

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Synopsis

It has become a relatively frequent occurrence for Bermuda companies to enter into ‘light touch’ provisional liquidation in Bermuda for restructuring purposes. This is often in tandem with parallel insolvency proceedings in the United States, Hong Kong or elsewhere, and where the Bermuda Supreme Court is acting as the ancillary court to a primary process taking place in the company’s centre of main interests. Where there are proceedings of this nature, the Court may require the implementation of a cross-border insolvency protocol and will often have to grapple with issues of recognition of a foreign order or plan. A recent ex tempore ruling of Narinder Hargun CJ on 6 October 2023 in the matter of Re BlockFi International Ltd (in provisional liquidation for restructuring purposes) No.363 of 2022 has shed some light on the importance of such a protocol which was drafted, somewhat atypically, not primarily to enhance inter-court cooperation and communication but to delineate and to an extent, regulate, the roles of estate fiduciaries and representatives appointed in Bermuda and in Chapter 11 proceedings in the United States.

Walkers’ Bermuda office acted jointly on behalf of BlockFi International Ltd and its joint provisional liquidators, and were successful in seeking orders approving a comprehensive cross-border protocol and recognition order with respect to the confirmed Chapter 11 plan. This article provides an overview of the proceedings, the common law basis for protocols and recognition, the challenges in designing a protocol to fit the circumstances, and the key procedural aspects, including the court’s jurisdiction to give directions to its officers, and to grant relief in support of an order for recognition of a foreign plan, including (in this specific case) a selfliquidating plan.

Insolvency & RestructuringBermuda

Solution areas

Insolvency and Restructuring

Key Contacts

Get in touch with our team

Steven White
Steven White

Steven White

Partner

Bermuda

T

+1 441 242 1562

M

+1 441 525 1562

E

Email Steven White
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John McSweeney
John McSweeney

John McSweeney

Senior Counsel

Bermuda

T

+1 441 242 1535

M

+1 441 525 1535

E

Email John McSweeney
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