
Zhang Jianjian
Haiwen & Partners
Beijing
Tel: +86 21 6043 5053
Email: zhangjianjian@haiwen-law.com
Introduction
Zhang Jianjian is a partner at Haiwen & Partners, with expertise in bankruptcy and reorganisation, distressed assets, and non-performing loans.
In the area of bankruptcy and reorganisation, he has represented investors in the reorganisation of Founder Group, Tsinghua Unigroup, Hainan Airlines, Taihai Manoir Nuclear Equipment, Xining Special Steel, and Beijing Taifeng Real Estate, as well as in the pre-reorganisation of Caissa Tosun and Beijing Jinyi Cultural. Zhang has participated as the administrator or temporary administrator in the reorganisation of Beijing Med-Zenith Medical Scientific Corporation, the pre-reorganisation of Jiayu Holdings and the pre-reorganisation and substantial consolidation reorganisation of China Aviation Erection Engineering (Beijing) Company and its related companies (the first pre-reorganisation case in Beijing and one of the top 10 representative cases issued by the Supreme People’s Court).
Zhang also participated as the legal adviser in the procedural consolidation reorganisation of Bohai Steel Group and its related companies, and Shenyang Machine Tool and its holding group. He acted as counsel to Jiangsu ChengXing Phospho-Chemical during its pre-reconciliation procedure and as legal counsel during its reconciliation procedure (the first successful A-share listed company reconciliation case).
In the area of distressed assets and non-performing loans, Zhang has successively represented China Cinda Asset Management, China Citic Financial Asset Management, Shandong Financial Asset Management, Oaktree Capital, Bain Capital, China Bohai Bank and CDH Investments in the acquisition of debt packages, disposal of non-performing assets and debts, debt and asset restructuring. Representative transactions include the exercise of the put option and resale of Xinhualian bonds and its related debt restructuring (a landmark representative case in this area), the restructuring of Lingshui Zhongyin and the Zhuhai Huafa inefficient asset revitalisation project.




