The long-awaited amendment "H" of the Slovenian Financial Operations, Insolvency Proceedings and Compulsory Act (the "Act") entered into force on 1 November 2023. The new provisions complete the transposition of Directive 2019/1023,1 introducing three crucial sets of changes to the Slovenian insolvency and restructuring legislation.
- Judicial restructuring procedure to remedy impending
insolvency
- The legislator added another procedure to the Slovenian preventive restructuring framework. The new (court-supervised) procedure provides an expanded toolbox (for example, debt to equity swaps and creation of common security pools – in addition to haircut and maturity extension) to borrowers who are not yet insolvent but are likely to become insolvent within a year ("impending insolvency").
- This new procedure aims for financial measures to be taken to
eliminate the causes of potential insolvency with more measures at
creditors' disposal in comparison to the existing preventive
restructuring and without the obligation to publicly proclaim the
state of insolvency or impending insolvency.
- The new procedure also includes a four-month standstill rule
for all enforcement and security proceedings, which may even be
extended upon the debtor's proposal based on the progress made
in financial restructuring (the maximum standstill period being 12
months).
- The provisions regulating the new judicial restructuring
procedure will enter into force on 1 January 2025.
- Additions and modifications to existing
proceedings
- Essential contracts of the debtor: The Act
established a concept of essential contracts of the debtor,
preventing counterparties from terminating or altering contracts to
the detriment of the distressed debtor during judicial
restructuring or compulsory settlement solely by virtue of the
debtor's financial distress. The concept of essential contracts
is limited to mutually unfulfilled bilateral (executory) contracts
for the continuation of day-to-day operations, such as those
related to energy, water, telecommunications and other utilities
supply. For debts incurred after the opening of the aforementioned
proceedings, the debtor is not entitled to protection under
essential contracts provisions.
- Management's obligations: To enhance the
efficiency of insolvency proceedings, the Act introduces changes to
the obligations of the management upon the occurrence of financial
distress. The previous iteration's complex process for
determining the insolvency filing deadline is streamlined in the
amendment. Now the management must promptly file for bankruptcy
within one month from the onset of insolvency2 or, if
the insolvency is the consequence of a pandemic, natural disaster
or emergency, within three months from the onset of
insolvency.
- Composition of the creditors' committee:
To ensure fair representation, the Act introduces a slight yet
significant change to the composition of the creditors'
committee, specifying the number of committee members and requiring
at least one representative of creditors with priority claims. The
committee now also has the right to review the books and
documentation obtained by the administrator from the debtor, though
this request can be denied for confidentiality reasons or due to
potential detriment to the debtor.
- Prohibition of distributing profits: To
protect creditors in compulsory settlement, profit distribution,
share capital decreases and return of subsequent shareholder
contributions are prohibited until all creditors affected by the
compulsory settlement are repaid.
- Essential contracts of the debtor: The Act
established a concept of essential contracts of the debtor,
preventing counterparties from terminating or altering contracts to
the detriment of the distressed debtor during judicial
restructuring or compulsory settlement solely by virtue of the
debtor's financial distress. The concept of essential contracts
is limited to mutually unfulfilled bilateral (executory) contracts
for the continuation of day-to-day operations, such as those
related to energy, water, telecommunications and other utilities
supply. For debts incurred after the opening of the aforementioned
proceedings, the debtor is not entitled to protection under
essential contracts provisions.
- Reconstruction of simplified compulsory settlement
proceedings
- The chapter "special rules on compulsory settlement for
small enterprises" replaces simplified compulsory settlement
proceedings due to misuse issues.
- Some highly publicised affairs and dissatisfaction among
creditors led to a new procedure with more restrictions,
specifically targeting the size of eligible companies.
- Limited to debtors meeting criteria for micro companies under
Slovenian corporate legislation and individual entrepreneurs with
total liabilities not exceeding EUR 700,000.
- The special rules provide a less strict approach than ordinary compulsory settlement and impose fewer obligations on debtors for reports and documentation by third parties. The provisions on the creditors' committee do not apply.
- The chapter "special rules on compulsory settlement for
small enterprises" replaces simplified compulsory settlement
proceedings due to misuse issues.
They say patience is the best remedy, and the same holds true for the legislative framework of insolvency. After patiently waiting for amendment "H" to be adopted, we are now patiently observing and helping to shape the implementation of these novelties in legal practice.
Footnotes
2. The Act defines insolvency as a situation where the debtor (i) within an extended period of time is not able to settle all of their liabilities falling due within such period of time (illiquidity), or (ii) cannot settle its liabilities in the longer term (e.g. the value of its assets is lower than the value of its liabilities, or the company's losses add up to half of the company's registered capital and those losses cannot be covered by profits or reserves – over-indebtedness).
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