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Snooze and lose meaning

What does Snooze and lose mean?
Snooze and lose describes, in practice, that a creditor or member who misses a stated deadline in a restructuring or insolvency process is treated as not voting and may find later objections carry limited weight. The phrase is not defined in legislation or case law; it is practitioner shorthand used across schemes of arrangement and restructuring plans under the Companies Act 2006 (Parts 26 and 26A), company voluntary arrangements (CVAs), administrations in England & Wales, Scotland and Northern Ireland, and Irish schemes and examinership under the Companies Act 2014. It refers to court directions, statutory rules and meeting notices that set strict cut‑offs for filing a proof of debt, lodging a notice of intention to vote, submitting a proxy/ballot, or serving evidence for a sanction/confirmation hearing. Missing the cut‑off commonly leads to: the vote not being counted; reduced standing to oppose sanction or confirmation; difficulty bringing a later challenge; and still being bound by the compromise (including cross‑class cram down under Part 26A). Timetables and mechanics vary by process and court order, but the practical effect is consistent across the UK and Ireland.
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View the related Checklists about Snooze and lose

CHECKLISTS
Lenders’ checklist for borrower‑initiated permanent amendments to facility agreements (bilateral and syndicated): fees, consents, guarantees and security, intercreditor, documentation, conditions precedent and post‑completion

This Checklist This Checklist outlines key considerations for lawyers (external or in-house) acting for the lender(s) when responding to a borrower led amendment request. It concentrates on permanent amendments rather than one off waiver or consent requests. For guidance on those, see Practice Note: Waivers and consents. In a syndicated transaction, the borrower will ordinarily deliver a written amendment request to the facility agent, which typically includes: the rationale for seeking the amendment, the specific clauses impacted, the applicable consent thresholds, and any snooze and lose provisions. The Loan Market Association (LMA) has published a helpful guide to the amendment process on a syndicated transaction. On a bilateral deal, a borrower’s amendment request to the lender may take a less formal form. This Checklist also references provisions in the Loan Market Association investment grade multicurrency term and revolving facilities agreement incorporating backward-looking compounded rates and forward-looking term rates (the LMA Investment Grade Facility Agreement) and Precedent: Facility...

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View the related Practice Notes about Snooze and lose

PRACTICE NOTES
Amending Facility Agreements: lender consents, syndicated processes, guarantees and security, documentation options, conditions precedent, and fees and expenses

This Practice Note outlines the principal issues to take into account when altering an existing facility agreement. It covers: typical drivers and rationales for changing a facility agreement key considerations when amending a facility agreement in the context of a bilateral or syndicated transaction matters to address where guarantees or security are in place ways to document an amendment, including whether to use an amendment letter, an amendment agreement, or an amendment and restatement agreement usual conditions precedent to effectiveness points concerning fees, costs and expenses This Practice Note does not address one-off waivers and consents. For further information on waivers and consents, see Practice Note: Waivers and consents. For material on amending security documents, see Practice Note: Amending security documents. For general contract law guidance on varying a contract, see Practice Note: Contract variation. Common reasons for amending a facility agreement After execution of the facility agreement and once funding has taken place, the borrower’s situation...

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PRACTICE NOTES
A-Z glossary of UK corporate restructuring and insolvency: key terms, procedures, enforcement and cross-border issues

This glossary sets out numerous expressions frequently encountered in the restructuring arena. Words appearing in the definitions in bold are explained in other entries in this glossary. For further banking terminology, see the principal Banking & Finance Glossary. Restructuring glossary—A Acceleration: Acceleration means the agent, acting on directions from the majority lenders after an event of default, takes formal action, for example calling for early repayment of the facility. Ad-hoc committee: A temporary creditors’ group (often contrasted with a formal committee) that lacks any entitlement to official recognition. Administration: A process under the IA 1986 in which a financially distressed company is operated by an administrator as a going concern before longer-term outcomes, such as break-up and sale, are pursued. Administrator: An Insolvency Practitioner named by the court, a Qualifying floating charge holder, the directors or the company, to take control and fulfil one of the purposes in IA 1986, Sch B1. Administrative receivership: Arises when a company breaches the terms of...

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PRACTICE NOTES
Acquisition and Leveraged Finance: Practitioner’s A–Z of Terms, Covenants, Structures and Jargon

This glossary sets out many of the expressions commonly used in the leveraged finance market. Words appearing in the definitions in bold are defined elsewhere in this glossary. For further banking terminology, please refer to the main Banking & Finance Glossary... Acquisition finance glossary—A Acceleration Acceleration is the formal action taken by the agent, on the instructions of the majority lenders, following an event of default, such as making a demand for early repayment of the loan. See Practice Note: Accelerating a loan for more information... Accordion feature/accordion facility An accordion, also called an incremental debt feature, is a mechanism in the facilities agreement that, provided specified conditions are satisfied (for example, pro forma compliance with a leverage test), permits those lenders under the facilities agreement who wish to do so to advance additional debt. The terms for that extra debt are typically captured in an increase notice. This accordion or incremental debt flexibility is different from structural adjustment, which usually requires the majority consent...

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