
Publication
Essential Corporate News – Week ending 23 May 2025
The Companies and Limited Liability Partnerships (Annotation) Regulations 2025 and an accompanying Explanatory Memorandum were published on 14 May 2025.
As we start the new year, it is worthwhile to take a look back at what was driving the restructuring environment in 2019. The world economies were favorably impacted by supportive monetary policy in the United States and other countries and buoyed as well by strong consumer and government spending. The most negative factors were the uncertainty created by the lack of resolution of Brexit in the UK and the continued trade tensions between the US and China. These issues are likely to persist in the new year. The take-away for 2019 was that no recession occurred (at least in the US) but growth in gross domestic product globally slowed and slipped to 2.3% from 3% in 2018.
What to expect in 2020 is anybody’s guess. Political uncertainty abounds, with impeachment proceedings and a presidential election looming in the US and instability and tension globally, particularly now in the Middle East. At the very least, US chief executives are getting worried about a recession. As recently reported in The Wall Street Journal, according to a recent survey, “fear of economic decline” topped their list of concerns for 2020. CEOs reported uncertainty around a host of issues, from trade to climate change, which has exacerbated their anxiety.
This global economic uncertainty for 2020 only makes it more imperative to stay on top of restructuring developments throughout the world. In this issue we look at restructuring changes across the Norton Rose Fulbright network: in the Netherlands, Canada, Australia and the UK, not to mention an article on further revisions to India’s bankruptcy laws.
All the best for 2020 and enjoy the issue.
Howard Seife
Global Head
Financial Restructuring and Insolvency
The implementation of the EU Restructuring Directive in the Netherlands: the “WHOA”
January 2020
The CCAA proceedings of Stornoway Diamond Corporation and its innovative approach to vesting orders
January 2020
The chill of competition constraints on the sale of distressed businesses in Australia
January 2020
UBS v. Fairfield Sentry: UK Privy Council says that US courts can use British Virgin Islands’ insolvency law
January 2020
In midst of credit crisis, India implements further changes to bankruptcy laws
January 2020
Watch > Introduction to Norton Rose Fulbright Cross-Border Insolvency Institute
Publication
The Companies and Limited Liability Partnerships (Annotation) Regulations 2025 and an accompanying Explanatory Memorandum were published on 14 May 2025.
Publication
The Regulator’s annual funding statement for private sector DB schemes was published on April 29, 2025. It is the first such statement since the new DB funding regime came into force from September 22, 2024, onwards.
Publication
The Regulator's annual DB funding statement for 2025 was published on April 29, 2025. This statement and the accompanying analysis paper are particularly relevant to schemes with valuation dates between September 22, 2024, and September 21, 2025, now known as Tranche 24/25 or T24/25 to reflect the calendar year (previously known as Tranche 20 or T20).
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