- home
- facet
- Chapter 11
Chapter 11
ai generated text
Chapter 11 of the United States Bankruptcy Code permits reorganization of businesses and individuals under the bankruptcy laws of the United States. A Chapter 11 bankruptcy can result in one of three outcomes for the debtor: reorganization, conversion to Chapter 7 bankruptcy, or dismissal. To reorganize, the debtor must file a plan of reorganization, which must be approved by the court and agreed to by the creditors, and meet certain requirements, including being feasible and proposed in good faith. In a successful reorganization, the debtor corporation is typically recapitalized with more equity and less debt, and some of its debts may be discharged.learn more on wikipedia
perspectives
- 1.Healthcare
- 2.Bankruptcy
- 3.DNA Testing
- 4.Regulation
- 5.Tech industry
- 6.Biology
- 7.Privacy Rights
- 8.Lawsuit
- 9.US-China Relations
- 10.Workers Strike
- 11.Aerospace Industry
- 12.Jobs Cut
countries
organizations
- 1.Bonta
- 2.Blackstone Group
- 3.Biobank
- 4.Bernstein Research
- 5.AncestryDNA
- 6.23andMe
- 7.US Bankruptcy Court
- 8.GlaxoSmithKline
- 9.Agency Partners
- 10.Airbus
- 11.Air Current
- 12.Alaska Air Group
persons
- 1.Anne Wojcicki
- 2.Rob Bonta
- 3.Richard Branson
- 4.Mark Jensen
- 5.Joe Selsavage
- 6.James Purtill
- 7.Matthew Wright
- 8.Ben Tsocanos
- 9.Brian West
- 10.Julie Su
- 11.Kelly Ortberg
- 12.Nick Cunningham