Bankruptcy Sounds Scary, Right?
Most people think of bankruptcy as a sign of failure. But in the business world — especially in real estate and corporate finance — bankruptcy is a legal strategy. A reset button. A way to restructure debt, protect assets, and walk away with better terms.
Definitions
- Chapter 11 Bankruptcy: Used by businesses to stay open while reorganizing debt.
- Cram Down: A court-ordered reduction of debt when the original amount can’t be supported by the asset’s income.
- Single Purpose Entity (SPE): A company formed for one specific asset, separating liability and risk.
- Recasting Debt: Restructuring loan payment terms to make them manageable.
The Real-World Game: Trump’s Casinos
Donald Trump took his Atlantic City casinos through Chapter 11 bankruptcy twice. He renegotiated debt, stayed in control, and kept operating. Bankruptcy was never about losing — it was about resetting the deal.
How the Cram Down Strategy Works
- File Chapter 11 through a Single Purpose Entity (SPE)
- Show the court the asset can’t support its current debt load
- Court approves the cram down — reducing debt to what the asset can actually support
You now own a property with significantly reduced debt — legally, without using personal credit.
C-Corps Make This Possible — LLCs Can’t Do It Like This
With a C-Corp, you can create SPEs, separate liability, buy notes at a corporate level, and restructure debt legally without touching your personal credit.
When the average person files bankruptcy, they lose their car. When a corporation files bankruptcy, they keep the plane — and restructure the lease.
Bankruptcy isn’t shameful — it’s strategic. The rich know it. The banks know it. Now you do too.
