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Features
Whereof What’s Past Is Prologue…
Asset-Based Loan Underwriting Standards Begin to Slide
By Howard Brod Brownstein, Principal, Nachman HaysBrownstein and
Contributing Editor, ABF Journal
At recent meetings of asset-based
lenders, a common theme was
sounded: A scant 12 months into
what many feel is a shaky economic
recovery, asset-based loan
underwriting standards are already
sliding. Those who have been
around secured lending for even
a decade can easily remember
similar cycles. Undoubtedly,
Shakespeare said it best when he
wrote, “Whereof what’s past
is prologue.”
(Ref # TM088)
From Workout to Turnaround —
The Right Stuff For Borrowers & Lenders
By Mark A. Tito, Relationship Manager, PNC Business Credit
The great moments of asset-based lending occur when
a lender discovers a client in a situation that looks
close to hopeless, and then finds ways to help that borrower
turn the corner and recover. Recently, a wave of successful
recoveries has contributed to new confidence in the
lending industry and greater competition amongst lenders
for distressed situations. How does a company go from
workouts to turnaround status?
(Ref # TM034)
Whom to Tell When & How to Say It:
Handling Bankruptcy Communication in the Middle-Market
By Daniel F. Dooley, Principal, Morris-Anderson & Associates
The following article is a basic
framework for proactive and positive
communications to the various
stakeholders as a company prepares
and files for a Chapter 11
bankruptcy. In larger cases,
professional public relations and
communication firms are regularly
engaged to handle this critical
task. However, in the middle-market,
turnaround and workout firms
often handle this task internally.
(Ref # BANK012)
Determining the Proper Path…
Machinery & Equipment Liquidation Versus Auction
By James Carlson, Appraiser/Auctioneer, Buxbaum/Century
When it comes to loans involving
machinery and equipment (M&E),
most lenders insist on an Orderly
Liquidation Value (OLV) appraisal.
Admittedly, rules enforced by their
own institutions compel some
of these lenders to take such a
stance. However, even lenders that
are not bound by mandates of
any kind will often refuse to waive
an OLV appraisal requirement.
While OLV may very well be the
most prudent way to go in
many cases, other considerations
bear weighing before definitive
action is taken.
(Ref # APP026)
Early Warning Signs:
Which of Your Customers Are Heading for Problems?
By Juanita Schwartzkopf, Principal, Focus Management Group
From February through April, lenders
typically receive the majority
of your customers’ year-end financial
statements. This is the perfect
time to take a hard look at your
borrowers and determine which ones
are exhibiting the warning signs
of problems in the future. Finding the
early warning signs provides
lenders with an opportunity to push
for refinance, bring in outside
consultants to improve performance,
or renegotiate the lending
relationship to better protect your
assets — all before the financial
crisis hits.
(Ref # TM089)
Converging Practice & Procedure in Canada…
A “Kinder, Gentler” Insolvency Process
By Kevin Morley, Chair/ABL Team and Tony Reyes, Partner, Ogilvy Renault
In Canada, the two most notable
trends over that last few years have
been a continuing convergence
of substantive and procedural aspects
of previously distinct processes,
and a movement toward a “kinder,
gentler” insolvency process,
which has been more inclusive and
cognizant of the rights of various
stakeholders such as employees,
unions and landlords.
(Ref # INTL022)
Speaking of Dilution…
A Guide to Dilution Analysis & Receivable Statistics (Part III)
By Joseph R. Caplan, President, Clear Choice Seminars
One of the most hotly debated areas
of asset-based lending field
exams is dilution and the related
data stemming from the calculation
of receivable roll-forward data,
often called AR Stats. Bar-room
level fights? Perhaps not, but
business development officers and
borrowers have pounded their
fists in protest of the results and
have been humbled by the findings.
(Ref # IND060)
Columns
A CLOSER LOOK
The “Not-So-Little” Inventory Nuance:
Small But Important Things to Consider In Field Exam Reports
By Michael J. Gilberg, Vice President, CIT Business Credit
LaSalle Business Credit provided
financing for Archibald
Candy Corporation, helping keep
the company operational
and its workforce employed while
it sought new ownership.
This noteworthy transaction was
recognized by the Turnaround
Management Association
as the Transaction of the Year
for 2004.
(Ref # FIELD005)
FACTORING FOCUS
Postcard From the Future:
IFA’s 2005 Factoring Conference in Vancouver
By Bert Goldberg, Founder & Executive Director, IFA and President, Distinctive Solutions (Ref # FAC043)
LEGAL EYES
Deepening Insolvency: A New Remedy or Problem Child?
By Valinda Barrett Wolfert, Shareholder and
Jaime L. Myers, Associate,
Winstead Sechrest & Minick P.C.
As with any emerging theory of legal
liability, deepening insolvency
has met its share of skepticism and
criticism from the courts and
legal commentators. As exciting as
a general theory of liability against
nearly every player involved
in the demise of an insolvent
corporation is to trustees seeking
recovery, the very vague and
seemingly shifting contours of this
policy are troubling, to say the
least, for secured lenders, directors,
officers and any other professional
who may be involved in
a bankruptcy case.
(Ref # LGL042)
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