![Rio](https://www.nortonrosefulbright.com/-/media/images/nrf/nrfweb/imported/carousel329x209riodejaneiro/rio-1920x1080.png?w=265&revision=4bc996af-8288-4763-9529-d127878c0a0d&revision=5250387992237387904&hash=4C111391036C3E3BDC76664E97B9B036)
Publication
The 2025 Dutch tax classification of the Brazilian FIP
The Dutch tax classification system for non-Dutch entities will undergo significant changes as of 1 January 2025.
Welcome to our fourth quarter issue of Norton Rose Fulbright's International Restructuring Newswire. We again draw on our global team of lawyers to address some of the key issues facing restructuring professionals.
The recent restructuring of the Dutch shipping group Vroon demonstrates vividly the challenges facing practitioners dealing with the complexities of cross-border situations. The restructuring also demonstrates that with creativity and perseverance, practitioners can use the tools that exist to put together deals that preserve businesses and maximize recoveries for creditors and other stakeholders. Here, we take an in-depth look at the successful Vroon restructuring and how the parties used both a Dutch WHOA and an English scheme of arrangement to get the deal done.
In this issue, we also hear from our practitioners in Canada on the challenges to intercreditor covenants in insolvency proceedings and in the US on how cannabis companies fare in the US bankruptcy courts. And we take a global view on two increasingly critical issues: the use of mediation in restructurings and risk to directors of companies on the cusp of insolvency.
Good reading!
Howard Seife
Global Co-Head of Restructuring
New York
Scott Atkins
Global Co-Head of Restructuring
Sydney
Publication
The Dutch tax classification system for non-Dutch entities will undergo significant changes as of 1 January 2025.
Publication
As previously observed, conflicts occasionally arise between mortgagees and charterers where a mortgagee wishes to take prompt action to enforce its rights, but the charterer wishes such enforcement action to be deferred until the end of the charter.
Publication
For some time now, the European Commission (EC) and national competition authorities (NCAs) have been striving to catch so-called “killer acquisitions” under their merger control rules to thereby close a perceived enforcement gap.
Subscribe and stay up to date with the latest legal news, information and events . . .
© Norton Rose Fulbright LLP 2023