Today there is a good example of an oil company coming out of chapter 11 bankruptcy. The symbol is $BAS. The news says that existing common stock holders received both new stock and warrants. Here again, people before the opening were confused that this was the old shares. They paid over $110 instead of $35. The NASDAQ has announced that they reviewed the trades and they will stand as executed. If you had the new shares, you could have sold them before the opening to these other confused people. It's crazy that NASDAQ approves of this but live by caveat emptor. In all likelihood, Goldman Sachs sold the shares and told NASDAQ not to unwind the trades. Didn't have any of this one. Damn!
The plan equitized over $800 million of unsecured debt, eliminated over $60 million in annual cash interest, and raised $125 million of new capital, the company said. Existing shareholders will receive new common stock and warrants in the reorganized company.
So technically they got equity but the shareholders went from owning 100% of the company to owning .5% (.26% after a mandatory convertible note conversion), so it was really a token amount of equity. They lost 99.74% of their ownership of the company in the bankruptcy. These kind of token gestures to shareholders aren't uncommon, but effectively meaningless.
From the company's restructuring page (http://basicenergyservices.com/about-us/restructuring.html)
"Provide the Company's existing shareholders with a recovery in the form of 0.5% of reorganized Basic's equity on the Effective Date (which will be 0.26% of the total outstanding equity in reorganized Basic upon conversion of the new mandatorily convertible notes assuming such conversion occurs 36 months after the Effective Date) and 7-year warrants to acquire an additional 6% of total outstanding equity in reorganized Basic (after giving effect to the conversion of the new mandatorily convertible notes)"

