In brief With a potential WeWork restructuring on the horizon, this article explores some unique issues landlords may face under their WeWork leases, with a focus on how courts around the world might address them. Key takeaways Landlords have built spaces that specifically cater to WeWork’s focus on co-working arrangements. As WeWork attempts to shed leases in a restructuring, landlords may be left with specially built spaces that are difficult to re-let. This may be…
Latest Posts
- Unique issues for WeWork’s landlords in the event of a global restructuring
- United States: The New Golden Rule for Payment of Default Interest upon Reinstatement of a Debt Agreement?
- United States: Even a Contract for Vice Services Doesn’t Count as an Unassignable Personal Services Contract Under Section 365 of the US Bankruptcy Code
- Japan: Japan to reform secured transactions law for the first time in 120 years
- United Kingdom: Collateral Appropriation – in a “commercially reasonable manner”
- Spain: The Transposition of the Restructuring Directive in Spain
- Canada: Supreme Court Clarifies Enforceability of Arbitration Clauses in Insolvency Proceedings
- Australia: 2022 TMA Australia National Conference – Talking to clients about transition
Recent
This article was first published on Law360.com and reproduced with permission from Law360. The Differences Between Assumption and…
One of the benefits the US Bankruptcy Code offers debtors is the ability to assign freely contracts under…
On 20 January 2023, the Interim Proposal on the Reform of Secured Transaction Law (“Interim Proposal”) was published…
ABT Auto Investments Limited vs. Aapico Investment Pte Ltd and Ors [2022] EWHC 2839 (Comm.) In brief A…
In late August 2022, the Spanish Parliament passed the transposition into Spanish law of the Directive (EU) 2019/1023…
In Peace River Hydro Partners v. Petrowest Corp., the Supreme Court of Canada (SCC) refused to stay a…