Special Report – Financial Restructuring & Liquidity Recovery
How Abtin Consulting Group Supports Frozen or Distressed Companies in Regaining Financial Agility
Many companies worldwide — and increasingly in Iran — enter a phase of financial “freeze” or distress, where despite owning significant assets, they lack the liquidity and operational agility to invest, innovate or service debt. These companies often face structural constraints: high debt burdens, insufficient cash flow, limited access to finance, weak governance, and outdated business models.
At the heart of revival lies liquidity recovery and financial restructuring: designing robust cash‑flow models, re‑structuring debt, entering into hybrid financing arrangements (e.g., debt‑to‑equity swaps, mezzanine capital), and engaging development banks or investment funds to unlock resources. Abtin Consulting Group offers tailored services in this field — from diagnostics to execution — enabling companies in the “freeze” zone to transform into resilient, growth‑oriented entities.
- A tailored approach to loan restructuring for a major firm included: debt renegotiation, working capital enhancement, settlement with creditors, and operational reorganisation.
- Distressed investments and corporate restructuring: investors acquired debt at discount, reorganised operations, and generated recovery value.
- A single Spanish listed company (2008‑2017) underwent financial distress life‑cycle with focus on debt adjustment; recovery was slow, pointing to inefficiencies in traditional restructuring processes.
- Debt‑to‑Equity Swaps: Converting part of debt into equity, reducing interest burden and aligning creditor/investor interests.
- Mezzanine Financing: Sub‑ordinated debt or preferred equity layer between senior debt and common equity, offering upside participation for lenders.
- Working Capital/Distressed Funds: Investment funds specialising in distressed assets provide capital and operational expertise (e.g., manufacturing turnaround, value extraction).
- Global firms like Grant Thornton publish that restructuring teams have recovered billions in assets, showing how combined advisory, asset recovery and restructuring resources create value.
- At country level, policies like the EU’s BRRD (Bank Recovery & Resolution Directive) and bail‑in tools illustrate how systemic restructuring frameworks support recovery of distressed firms.
- Research on Iranian manufacturing firms shows that companies which exited “financial distress” were those with lower current‑liabilities to total‑assets ratios, higher net profit to sales, and higher sales to current assets ratios.
- Studies on liquidity management in Iranian firms report that economic sanctions adversely affect liquidity through constrained imports/exports, increased inflation, reduced flexibility in receivables/payables.
- Practical commentary in Persian highlights three critical liquidity bottlenecks for Iranian firms: delayed receivables, unplanned payables, and uncontrolled investment commitments.
- High leverage and short maturities in debt structure; limited access to long‑term financing or equity injections.
- Weak market for corporate debt & mezzanine instruments; limited investor pool for distressed capital.
- Governance / transparency issues that deter foreign investment or development‑bank support.
- Macroeconomic volatility (currency, inflation) that further constrains cash‑flow forecasting and debt servicing.
- Limited specialised advisory/rescue market in Iran (versus established global turnaround advisory firms).
Abtin Consulting Group’s methodology comprises three integrated pillars: Diagnostic & Modelling, Financing & Execution, and Governance & Monitoring.
- Conduct a Liquidity & Restructuring Diagnostic: Identify cash‑flow gaps, asset‑liability mismatches, stress scenarios.
- Develop multi‑scenario cash‑flow forecasts (e.g., Base, Adverse, Severe) including sensitivities to currency, interest rate, receivables delays.
- Map the Working Capital Cycle: AR days, AP days, Inventory days, Cash conversion period; benchmark against industry.
- Design debt‑to‑equity swaps or mezzanine capital solutions tailored to Iranian regulatory and tax environment.
- Engage with domestic and regional investment funds, development banks, or private equity to inject growth capital combined with restructuring advisory.
- Negotiate debt amendments: maturity extension, interest reduction, covenant waivers, creditor settlement agreements (as seen in global cases).
- Restructure assets: sale/non‑core asset disposal to raise liquidity and reduce leverage (as in Fortenova case).
- Establish a Restructuring Steering Committee reporting to the Board, with clear KPIs (cash conversion cycle, leverage ratio, liquidity cushion).
- Monitor post‑restructuring performance through dashboards, periodic reviews and early‑warning indicators (EWI).
- Align organizational incentives: management remuneration tied to liquidity recovery and debt reduction milestones, ensuring credible turnaround.
| Timeline | Actions | Key Outcomes |
| Months 0‑3 | Diagnostic of cash flows, debt profile, scenario modelling | Identify critical cash‑flow shortfall; baseline metrics |
| Months 4‑9 | Negotiate debt restructuring; secure mezzanine/equity injection | Reduced interest cost; improved liquidity buffer |
| Months 10‑18 | Implement working‑capital improvements (receivables, inventory, payables) | Reduced cash‑conversion cycle by 20‑30% |
| Months 18‑24 | Monitor performance, refine governance, dispose non‑core assets | Achieve positive free‑cash‑flow and improved credit profile |
- Rapid liquidity unlock: With targeted working‑capital improvements and financial structuring, clients may free up significant cash for operations and investment.
- Enhanced access to capital: By structuring deals attractive to funds or banks, clients gain access to alternative financing channels.
- Reduced risk of “freeze”: Improved forecasting, governance and early‑warning reduce likelihood of cash‑flow stall or insolvency.
- Strategic readiness: Post‑restructuring, firms are better positioned for growth, M&A, or entry into new markets — turning survival into opportunity.
- Diagnosing cash‑flow mismatch early is critical: most distressed firms linger too long before restructuring.
- Hybrid financing (equity + mezzanine) often outperforms pure debt roll‑over because it realigns incentives and reduces interest burden.
- In constrained environments (like Iran under sanctions), combining working‑capital relief with governance reform is essential — technical restructuring alone is insufficient.
- Drawing on global case studies — e.g., Collection House in Australia (cash‑flow & receivables recovery), Fortenova in Europe (asset disposal + refinancing) — provides actionable templates for locally‑adapted solutions.
Liquidity recovery and financial restructuring are not just reactive measures for distressed firms — they are strategic imperatives for companies seeking to emerge from freeze‑mode and re‑establish sustainable growth. Abtin Consulting Group stands ready to serve as a trusted partner in this journey: blending diagnostic rigour, financing creativity, and governance excellence, to transform the frozen into the forward‑moving.