NEW YORK: US corporate bankruptcies have soared this year and more are on the 
way, highlighting a historic and pivotal year for those in the restructuring 
industry. 

Virtually no segment of the US economy has been safe from a rolling tide of job 
losses, stock market declines and home foreclosures that have knocked a range 
of industries to their knees. 

"We are certainly seeing more companies, particularly among insurance and 
financial institutions, going through unprecedented times fighting for 
survival," said Randall Eisenberg, senior managing director for restructuring 
advisor FTI Consulting. 

Companies in more industries than ever are finding themselves in distress, 
ranging from retailers, home builders and restaurants, to financial firms, 
transportation providers and energy companies. But at the same time, the 
turmoil has created unprecedented opportunities for distressed or vulture 
investors , and those attorneys, consultants and other experts who help 
companies sort out their problems. 

"There are all of these (private equity investors) getting into the business, 
by buying and rolling up these industries that are in trouble," said Sheila 
Smith, head of reorganization at Deloitte Financial Advisory Services. 

Government bailouts and increasingly large bankruptcies are starting to rewrite 
the rules for overseeing corporate collapses. Nothing serves to highlight the 
shift more than the rapid and unexpected downfall of some of the country's most 
powerful firms, including Lehman Brothers Holdings $637 billion bankruptcy 
filing this week. 

"The Lehman Brothers bankruptcy is taking the restructuring industry into 
uncharted waters," said David Pauker, a managing director with restructuring 
advisor Goldin Associates. 

"Much of the learning and experience that derives from earlier failures of 
large financial firms-Drexel (Burnham Lambert), Refco, Enron-will be revisited 
and revised." 

The number of US businesses filing for bankruptcy has soared 42% from a year 
ago, according to the Administrative Office for US Courts. 

Already this year, more public companies have filed for Chapter 11 and Chapter 
7 bankruptcy than during all of 2007, according to BankruptcyData.com. 

The credit crisis has also complicated things for struggling companies, by 
hurting their ability to refinance their debts or even gain financing to exit 
bankruptcy protection. Auto parts maker Delphi Corp, for example, has been 
struggling to get financing to exit bankruptcy protection for most of the year. 

And as market fright intensifies , it becomes more likely other firms will fail 
or be forced to sell themselves. 

"Equity markets and other segments of the credit markets continue to crater, 
raising fears of systemic risk," Diane Vazza , head of ratings agency Standard 
& Poor's global fixed income group, wrote in a note to clients. Vazza will be 
among the specialists to address Reuters reporters and editors at its 
Restructuring Summit. 

While a global credit crunch has slammed financial firms, higher energy prices 
have sent regional airlines such as Denver-based Frontier Airlines Holdings 
into bankruptcy court. 

http://economictimes.indiatimes.com/More_US_corporate_bankruptcies_to_surface/articleshow/3534831.cms
Trouble shared is trouble halved. 
>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>Lee Iacocca






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