Financial Forensics: The Due Diligence Files
One hundred projects. Seventeen countries. Five continents. And a bridge in Istanbul that nobody would buy. That is not a metaphor for fragility. It is the precise architecture of how a ninety-year-old Italian infrastructure contractor filed for creditor protection in September 2018. Not because its projects failed. Not because its revenue collapsed. Because its entire refinancing plan—a three-hundred-million-euro capital raise, a revolving credit facility that matured in 2019, and seven hundred and fifty million euros in bonds that matured in 2020—was conditioned on the sale of a single concession asset in a country whose currency had lost forty percent of its value against the dollar in the year before the deadline. 🔴 Every corporate failure leaves behind a pattern. FFL Risk Pattern Scan provides access to a searchable library of documented corporate collapses, frauds and restructurings that can be filtered by geography, sector, collapse mechanism and fraud vector. Compare live opportunities against historical cases using pattern matching and risk assessment tools designed for investors, lenders and deal teams. All analysis runs locally and remains private. https://risk-pattern-scan.lovable.app/ [https://risk-pattern-scan.lovable.app/] This financial autopsy deconstructs the sudden collapse of Astaldi S.p.A. in September 2018, analyzing the structural vulnerabilities of the Engineering, Procurement, and Construction (EPC) model when paired with long-term concession equity ownership. We map out the mechanical progression where accumulating minority equity stakes in major project vehicles—intended to secure long-duration cash flows—instead transformed an expansive balance sheet into an illiquid concentration risk with a single point of failure. The analysis dissects the compounding nature of two simultaneous geographic shocks: the two-hundred-and-thirty-million-euro write-down of Venezuelan receivables in late 2017 and the severe devaluation of the Turkish lira in 2018, which froze the critical four-hundred-and-sixty-two-million-dollar divestment of the Yavuz Sultan Selim Bridge. We integrate this specific operational anchor failure into the broader context of multi-jurisdictional insolvencies by comparing it with the BHS file, where another single-path corporate restructuring plan was similarly derailed by an unperforming counterparty link. Furthermore, the episode details the resulting cross-default cascade. We track how the Italian concordato in bianco domestic filing failed to legally shield Astaldi's non-Italian operating footprints, triggering independent insolvency provisions and contract terminations from Florida and Canada to Chile. Financial Forensics Labs — Every collapse has a pattern. We dissect it. Layer by layer. Astaldi S.p.A. insolvency concordato in bianco Court of Rome, Yavuz Sultan Selim Bridge Third Bosphorus concession sale, EPC contractor infrastructure concession equity balance sheet illiquidity, Turkish lira currency crisis emerging market sovereign risk, Venezuela receivables write down impairment financial distress, Webuild Salini Impregilo Progetto Italia strategic acquisition consolidation, project finance cross default cascade contract termination clauses, revolving credit facility corporate bond refinancing failure, global project portfolio jurisdictional fragmentation structural asset risk, infrastructure concession asset valuation discounted cash flow carrying value, capital strengthening programme underwriting syndicate equity raise hurdles, Fortress Investment Group stabilization bridge financing corporate recovery, public private partnership PPP contract event of default triggers, financial forensics corporate liquidity engineering bankruptcy analysis
260 episodios
Comentarios
0Sé la primera persona en comentar
¡Regístrate ahora y únete a la comunidad de Financial Forensics: The Due Diligence Files!