"A liquidation is not a restructuring. It just isn't lol."
I didn't mention liquidation in my last post. I'm willing to concede that liquidation may be a stretch as a restructuring....although at least some economists would disagree with you...as I found the reference to liquidation as a form of restructuring on a financial website (http://financetrain.com/types-of-restructuring/). Though how reliable the source is, I don't really know.
But anyway...what I had actually posted was other examples that are not liquidation that investopedia referred to. How answer you about these other types?...
You also ignored the rest of the investopedia post where there are many other forms of restructuring that don't require capitalization in any way. Other forms that were listed are: -change in overall goals -transfer to a relative -restructure its financial arrangements -file for bankruptcy
Let me guess...changing a companies goals REQUIRES capitalization according to you. Because according to the financial experts at investopedia, it is a form of restructuring...and last time I checked, changing a goal or charter does not require additional capital in any way.