You find your company is owed a great deal of money that looks like it may not be collected because your client/tenant/customer has filed bankruptcy, has commenced an assignment for the benefit of creditors, has been put into receivership, or is otherwise just plain insolvent. What do you do? What should you not do? The topics discussed in this webinar include the pros and cons of putting a counterparty into involuntary bankruptcy; when and how you may be able to pursue third parties (like guarantors, directors, or officers) for the amount owed; risks related to preference attack; pros and cons of sitting on a "creditors' committee" in a Chapter 11; how to negotiate for "critical vendor" protection in Chapter 11; and practical guidance for continuing to provide goods or services to an insolvent counterparty. Continue reading.
To learn more, click here.
The webinar will be available on-demand after its premiere. As with every Financial Poise Webinar, it will be an engaging and plain English conversation designed to entertain as it teaches.
Read this here.:
https://jessicapressreleases.blogspot.com/2018/05/autopets-opens-2018-out-of-box-thinking.html
About Financial Poise –
Financial Poise has one mission: to provide reliable plain English business, financial and legal education to investors, private business owners and executives, and their respective trusted advisors. Financial Poise content is created by seasoned, respected experts who are invited to join our Faculty only after being recommended by current Faculty Members. Our editorial staff then works to make sure all content is easily digestible. Financial Poise is a meritocracy; nobody can "buy" their way into the Financial Poise Faculty. Start learning today at https://www.financialpoise.com/ Read related news here.
.© Copy Right 2019 Jessica Brown's Press Releases.
All information are taken from the news source. We do not promise anything nor take any responsibility for anything the news owner claim. We just share the news as is. You can contact news owner directly in the message for more information.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.