Regulatory Subject to certain exceptions, it is unlawful for any person to sell notes, bonds, or debentures in interstate commerce unless the security has been issued under an indenture and qualified under the Act. Trustees appointed under such indentures have specified duties: :* § 314(d) requires certificates and opinions as to the fair value of the collateral being released, but relief in the form of a "no-action letter" is available from the SEC in certain circumstances :* § 313(b) requires specified reports to holders with respect to the release of collateral Complications as to financial reporting requirements can arise where the indentures are secured by a pledge of stock, in which case Rule 3-16 of
Regulation S-X may come into play. Many issuers attempt to mitigate the impact by inserting "collateral cut-back" provisions into their indentures, but the SEC has not endorsed the concept that such a cut-back does not constitute a release of collateral.
Statutory prohibition of impairment § 316(b) provides that "the right of any holder of any indenture security to receive payment of the principal of and interest on such indenture security, on or after the respective due dates expressed in such indenture security, or to institute suit for the enforcement of any such payment on or after such respective dates, shall not be impaired or affected without the consent of such holder..." This prohibition is subject to several exceptions: :* the temporary postponement of interest payments under § 316(a)(2) :* an indenture may contain a provision limiting or denying the right of a bondholder to sue if and to the extent that that suit would, under applicable law, result in an adverse effect on a lien securing the bonds. :* an application under
Chapter 11 of the
Bankruptcy Code This provision saw little litigation prior to 1992. Recent jurisprudence (especially in the
Southern District of New York) has expanded its reach, holding that the Act "protects the
ability, and not merely the formal right, to receive payment in some circumstances," and ruling that impairment includes
stripping a company's assets and removing any corporate
guarantees. While this may result in more distressed issuers resorting to
Chapter 11 to pursue restructuring efforts, other issuers may be prohibited from filing for such reliefby virtue of their reliance on federal funding or otherwiseand thus may be precluded from altering the repayment terms of their bond debt altogether. == See also ==