What is Fraudulent Conveyance?

Risk: High. Transactions can be unwound.

What it is

A fraudulent conveyance (or fraudulent transfer) is a transfer of assets made to hinder creditors or for less than reasonably equivalent value while insolvent. Such transfers can be unwound by a court or bankruptcy trustee.

Why it matters in your deal

For self-funded buyers, commercial tenants, and franchise candidates, fraudulent conveyance matters because it can change economics, leverage, closing certainty, post-close exposure, or the attorney questions that need to be answered before capital is committed. Risk signal: High. Transactions can be unwound.

Real example

A self-funded buyers, commercial tenants, and franchise candidates can see fraudulent conveyance language that looks routine until it controls leverage, money, timing, remedies, or closing risk. The practical question is not just what the clause says, but what it lets the other side do when the deal becomes stressed.

Red flags to watch

  • Watch for deals where the target's solvency after the transaction is thin; a solvency opinion is often obtained to manage this risk.
  • One-sided language that gives the other party discretion while limiting your consent, notice, cure, or remedy rights.
  • Undefined dollar caps, timing rules, notice methods, survival periods, territory, or trigger conditions.
  • Cross-references that move the real obligation into an exhibit, schedule, FDD item, lease addendum, or outside policy.
  • Terms that conflict with the self-funded buyers, commercial tenants, and franchise candidates diligence plan, financing assumptions, operating model, or counsel review checklist.

What to do

  1. 1Quote the operative fraudulent conveyance language and send the full surrounding section to counsel.
  2. 2Tie the clause to economics, timing, remedies, assignment rights, consent requirements, and any closing condition it affects.
  3. 3Ask for revisions that replace discretion with objective standards, defined notice periods, measurable caps, and clear cure rights.
  4. 4Confirm the governing law, jurisdiction, and document cross-references before relying on the clause in negotiation.

Sources

  1. Cornell Legal Information Institute - contract
  2. Cornell Legal Information Institute - breach of contract
Clause guide

Go from definition to the real contract behavior

This term is easier to understand when you see how it behaves inside a live agreement. These clause guides show what makes the language risky, what Inkvex checks, and what to push on before you sign.

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How Inkvex catches this

Inkvex extracts fraudulent conveyance language from APAs, leases, FDDs, and related diligence documents, quotes the operative text, scores risk on a 1-10 scale, and turns the issue into a first-pass for your attorney. This is legal information, not legal advice.

Frequently asked questions

What is Fraudulent Conveyance?

A fraudulent conveyance (or fraudulent transfer) is a transfer of assets made to hinder creditors or for less than reasonably equivalent value while insolvent. Such transfers can be unwound by a court or bankruptcy trustee.

Why does fraudulent conveyance matter in your deal?

For self-funded buyers, commercial tenants, and franchise candidates, fraudulent conveyance matters because it can change economics, leverage, closing certainty, post-close exposure, or the attorney questions that need to be answered before capital is committed. Risk signal: High. Transactions can be unwound.

What are the red flags to watch for in fraudulent conveyance?

Watch for deals where the target's solvency after the transaction is thin; a solvency opinion is often obtained to manage this risk. One-sided language that gives the other party discretion while limiting your consent, notice, cure, or remedy rights. Undefined dollar caps, timing rules, notice methods, survival periods, territory, or trigger conditions. Cross-references that move the real obligation into an exhibit, schedule, FDD item, lease addendum, or outside policy.

How does Inkvex analyze fraudulent conveyance?

Inkvex extracts fraudulent conveyance language from APAs, leases, FDDs, and related diligence documents, quotes the operative text, scores risk on a 1-10 scale, and turns the issue into a first-pass for your attorney. This is legal information, not legal advice.

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