Today's proposal aims at harmonising targeted elements of Member States' insolvency rules and at creating common minimum standards across all Member States, thereby facilitating cross-border investment.
      
    
    
      CORPORATE INSOLVENCY
Why is the Commission proposing a targeted harmonisation of insolvency proceeding rules?
Today's initiative, announced in the Capital Markets Union Action 
Plan of September 2020, is part of the Commission's priority to advance 
the Capital Markets Union (CMU). The lack of harmonised insolvency 
regimes has long been identified as one of the key obstacles to the 
freedom of capital movement in the EU and to greater integration of the 
EU's capital markets. Today's proposal aims at harmonising targeted 
elements of Member States' insolvency rules and at creating common 
minimum standards across all Member States, thereby facilitating 
cross-border investment.
Member States' different starting points, legal traditions and policy
 preferences imply that reforms at national level in this area are 
unlikely to lead to a convergence of insolvency systems. Action at EU 
level is, therefore, needed to reduce this fragmentation.
What specifically is the Commission proposing?  
The proposal aims to accomplish convergence in three key dimensions 
of corporate (non-bank) insolvency law: (i) ensuring that creditors can 
recover the maximum value from the liquidated company, (ii) the 
efficiency of insolvency procedures and (iii) the predictable and fair 
distribution of recovered value among creditors.
- Maximising the recovery value of the liquidated estate
 
Today's proposal introduces a minimum set of harmonised conditions 
across the EU to ensure that debtors do not reduce the value that 
creditors can get. It will also introduce conditions on asset 
traceability by improving insolvency practitioners' access to asset 
registers, including in a cross-border setting. This is combined with 
the possibility of maximising the recovery value of the business at an 
early stage through ‘pre-pack' sales (i.e. a planned insolvency 
procedure where the assets are sold to a designated purchaser) and an 
obligation on company directors to file for insolvency without undue 
delay to avoid potential asset value losses for creditors.  
- Enhanced procedural efficiency
 
The proposal also sets up rules for a simplified winding-up procedure
 for insolvent microenterprises. For those small companies, the cost of 
ordinary insolvency procedures is often prohibitively high. The new 
rules will ensure that microenterprises, even those with no assets, are 
wound up orderly, in a fast and cost-effective procedure. This will also
 ensure that entrepreneurs can have a debt discharge at the end of the 
procedure. To accomplish this, as a rule, no insolvency practitioner 
should be appointed (as this is an additional cost), the debtor should 
remain in possession of the assets and of the day-to-day operation of 
the business throughout the procedure and the residual value of assets 
should be realised through an electronic auction system.
- Fair and predictable distribution of recovered value
 
Today's proposal sets out how creditors' interests can be represented
 in “creditors' committees.” Creditor committees are a key tool to 
protect the interests of all creditors. The proposal sets out conditions
 for such committees to be created and minimum harmonisation rules in 
relation to key aspects, such as the appointment of the members and the 
composition of the committee, the working methods, the rights and 
functions of the committee, as well as the personal liability of its 
members.
What is this proposal changing? 
The corporate insolvency proposal:
- Harmonises conditions for “transaction avoidance”. 
This will protect the insolvency estate by clawing back assets that were
 wrongfully disposed of prior to the opening of insolvency proceedings 
(e.g. if a debtor makes a donation to a friend just before insolvency 
proceedings);
 - Makes it easier to trace assets across borders by facilitated insolvency practitioners' access to asset registers;
 - Allows for the preparation and negotiation of the sale of the debtor's business before the formal opening of the insolvency proceedings (‘pre-pack'). This will help prevent the quick deterioration of the value of the company (‘melting ice cube effect');
 
- Requires directors to file for insolvency without undue delay to avoid potential asset value losses for creditors (‘zombie firms');
 - Provides simplified procedures for insolvent microenterprises, hence reducing the costs of the proceedings and guaranteeing an orderly liquidation;
 - Improves representation of creditors' interests through creditors' committees;
 - Makes key features of national insolvency regimes, including insolvency triggers and the ranking of claims, more transparent for creditors to reduce the cost for cross-border investors to search the information....
 
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