{"id":3436,"date":"2017-09-27T14:45:23","date_gmt":"2017-09-27T19:45:23","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.campbellslegal.com\/?p=3436"},"modified":"2019-08-05T09:49:24","modified_gmt":"2019-08-05T14:49:24","slug":"oil-troubled-waters-successful-restructuring-ocean-rig-group","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.campbellslegal.com\/client-advisory\/oil-troubled-waters-successful-restructuring-ocean-rig-group-3436\/","title":{"rendered":"Oil on Troubled Waters: successful restructuring of Ocean Rig Group"},"content":{"rendered":"

In Ocean Rig\u00a0<\/em>[1]<\/a>, the Grand Court sanctioned four inter-related schemes of arrangement (the \u201cSchemes<\/strong>\u201d), as part of a group restructuring of over US$3.69 billion of New York law governed debt \u2013 in value terms, the largest judicially approved restructuring<\/a> in the Cayman Islands. In each case, the scheme companies moved their COMI from the Marshall Islands to the Cayman Islands not long before the Schemes were promoted; but that did not prevent the Schemes subsequently receiving recognition in parallel Chapter 15 proceedings.<\/p>\n

Creditor participation and support at the scheme meetings was high, but there was opposition from a significant creditor, Highland Capital Management LP and affiliates (“Highland<\/strong>“), which voted against the proposed scheme of the parent company Ocean Rig UDW Inc (\u201cUDW<\/strong>\u201d), on which the other schemes were conditional.\u00a0 Highland also objected to the UDW scheme at both the convening hearing and the sanction hearing.<\/p>\n

Highland\u2019s position changed over the course of the two hearings, but Highland\u2019s main arguments were that:<\/p>\n