Hogan Lovells20The Netherlands•Due to the effects of the COVID-19 pandemic onbusinesses, the Dutch government is acceleratingthe introduction of a new piece of legislation,the Confirmation of Extrajudicial RestructuringPlans (Wet Homologatie Onderhands Akkoord)(“WHOA”), that provides for both public andprivate pre-insolvency restructuring proceedingswhich in essence allows debtors (or their creditors)to compromise certain debts. This new piece oflegislation has been passed by both the House ofRepresentatives and the Senate. This act has beenpublished in the Bulletin of Acts and Decrees on3 November 2020 and entered into force on 1January 2021.The restructuring plan can be either apublic or a non-public procedure.Non-public procedures are confidential tothe parties, will not be covered by the RecastInsolvency Regulation1 and can be enteredinto by any debtor with sufficient nexus to theNetherlands. Public procedures are – as thename suggests – public, so all hearings andjudgments are public, will be listed in andso recognized under the Recast InsolvencyRegulation, are registered in the Dutch traderegister and the Dutch Central InsolvencyRegister and are open to entities whose COMIis in the Netherlands.•Once the plan has been drafted, those creditorsand/or shareholders affected must vote on it(although the debtor can go to court before thevoting takes place to ask for a ruling on matterssuch as valuation, class formation and sufficiencyof information). Creditors will be placed intoclasses, depending on their respective legalpositions. As a minimum, each creditor mustbe placed in a class which under the plan hasthe same ranking vis-a-vis other creditors as thecreditor would have had in the insolvency of thedebtor. Secured creditors will generally be classedtogether but only for that part of their claimwhich is “in the money”, based on a liquidationvaluation. The remainder of the claim will betreated as unsecured.•The plan will be treated as approved by aclass if more than two-thirds in value of thecreditors voting in that class, vote in favor.For shareholder classes, the threshold is twothirds of the issued capital of those that votedwithin that class.The new process, sometimes known as the “DutchScheme”, is inspired by and based upon theexperience of composition plans in the UK andthe US. As soon as the legislative proposal entersinto force, it will enable debtors to force dissentingcreditors within the scope of the compositionplan to comply with the plan, provided that themajority of the creditors have approved thecomposition plan. More detail is set out below:•1In essence, the WHOA introduces an efficientdebtor-in-possession (“DIP”) procedure whichallows legal entities and individuals whichconduct an enterprise or an independentprofession and which believe they are likelyto be unable to pay their debts in the future,to present a debt restructuring plan to theircreditors and/or shareholders. The plan canthen be submitted to the court for approval.Although creditors, shareholders or workscouncil representatives cannot themselvespropose a restructuring plan, they can petitionthe court to appoint a restructuring expertwho may propose such plan on their behalf.The debtor can propose an alternative planto the restructuring expert’s plan. However,the debtor’s consent is not required for therestructuring expert’s restructuring plan,unless the debtor is a small or medium-sizedenterprise (“SME”).Regulation (EU) 2015/848 of the European Parliament and of the Council of 20 May 2015 on insolvency proceedings.
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