• videocam On-Demand Webinar
  • signal_cellular_alt Intermediate
  • card_travel Banking and Commercial Finance
  • schedule 90 minutes

Debtor-in-Possession Orders and Loan Agreements: Loan Structures and Common Terms, Events of Default and Remedies

About the Course

Introduction

This CLE webinar will discuss debtor-in-possession (DIP) financing and when circumstances make a DIP loan a sound strategy for lenders. The panel will review the statutory basis for DIP financing; lender strategies and goals; the DIP financing process; loan structures and amounts; related costs; terms and maturity; liens; covenants; and default events, as well as lender control limits. Key lender negotiation considerations will also be explored by our panel of experts.

Description

The primary reason for most Chapter 11 bankruptcy filings is an imminent lack of liquidity. DIP loans are typically asset-based revolving working capital facilities put into place at the outset of a Chapter 11 filing to provide both immediate cash as well as ongoing working capital during the reorganization process. DIP financing is available in both unsecured and secured form, each of which provides a secured lender with incentives and protections to encourage it to lend money to a debtor.

A DIP loan facility may be structured as a term loan, revolving credit facility, or other form of credit. Because term loans are usually fully funded, such a structure could result in higher interest costs for the debtor. Revolving credit facilities generally have lower interest costs than a fully drawn term loan because the debtor may draw down the loan and repay only as necessary to maintain the court-approved budget. Depending on the situation, the DIP facility may combine a term loan and revolving credit facility.  

Bankruptcy courts must approve DIP loan facility terms. In addition to collateral and a super-priority claim, DIP loans are typically designed with covenants and other protections to permit the DIP lender a full recovery even if the debtor liquidates. The loan documents and/or the DIP Order will typically provide: for a borrowing base; that all asset-sale proceeds must be applied to reduce the DIP loans and commitments; that the primed pre-bankruptcy lenders cannot exercise remedies until the DIP loan has been repaid; and that certain events, like conversion of the case to a Chapter 7 or appointment of a trustee in bankruptcy, permit the DIP lender to call the loan.

Listen as our authoritative panel evaluates the circumstances when DIP loans are advantageous for lender clients. The panel will provide practice tips for selecting the appropriate DIP loan structure, as well as best practices for negotiating and documenting key loan terms.

Credit Information
  • This 90-minute webinar is eligible in most states for 1.5 CLE credits.


  • Live Online


    On Demand

Date + Time

  • event

    Wednesday, May 20, 2026

  • schedule

    1:00 PM ET/10:00 AM PT

I. Overview of DIP financing: history, objectives, party incentives

II. Lender strategies, preferred structures, common terms

III. Court authorization, security, DIP lender protections

IV. Remedies and defaults

V. Debtor acknowledgments, releases, stipulations

VI. Priority claims and liens for DIP obligations: intercreditor agreements, senior and junior lenders

VII. Adequate protection and enforcement

VIII. Restrictions, waivers, miscellaneous provisions

IX. Litigation trends: provisions typically not allowed by bankruptcy courts

The panel will review these and other key issues:

  • What are the strategic incentives and benefits for DIP lenders?
  • What protections does the Bankruptcy Code provide DIP lenders?
  • What are the common DIP financing structures and loan terms?
  • What are the key considerations when a lender is negotiating the terms of a DIP financing order or credit agreement?