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The Companies Act reform Japan practitioners have anticipated for years moved decisively forward in April 2026, when the Ministry of Justice (MOJ) released an interim draft amendment package and opened a public consultation process. The draft targets three areas of immediate concern to anyone involved in restructuring or corporate distress: the scope and timing of directors’ duties toward creditors, the procedural protections available to secured and unsecured creditors during court‑supervised reorganisations, and the statutory framework governing court‑appointed trustees, supervisors and examiners. For corporate counsel, restructuring advisers and creditor committees, the consultation window represents the single best opportunity to shape the rules that will govern insolvency‑adjacent decision‑making for the next decade.
This guide breaks down the draft amendments, maps them against current law and provides practitioner checklists that boards, creditors and court appointees can deploy immediately.
The MOJ’s interim draft, published for public consultation in April 2026, proposes the most significant set of Companies Act amendments Japan has seen since the comprehensive 2014 revision. Building on policy groundwork laid by the Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry (METI) study group, which published its findings in January 2025, the draft touches governance standards, disclosure mechanics, share‑issuance safeguards and the interaction between corporate law duties and insolvency proceedings.
The material impacts for restructuring practice fall into four categories:
Industry observers expect these changes, once enacted, to require immediate updates to board governance protocols, creditor monitoring playbooks and court‑appointment practice manuals. The recommended immediate action is to conduct a gap analysis of existing governance and creditor‑communication policies against the draft text before the consultation window closes.
Understanding precisely what the draft changes is essential before planning any compliance response. The amendments most relevant to restructuring in Japan fall into two clusters: governance reforms and creditor/restructuring‑specific reforms.
Practical takeaways: (1) Review all existing board resolution templates against the new documentation standard. (2) Audit recent or planned share issuances for compliance with the proposed cooling‑off and notification requirements. (3) Prepare a “state of affairs” report template for use if a court appointment is made.
The companies act reform Japan introduces will fundamentally alter the duty framework directors operate within once financial difficulty arises. Under current law, directors’ fiduciary duties run primarily to the company and its shareholders, with creditor interests receiving attention only after formal insolvency proceedings commence. The draft changes that calculus.
The draft amendment establishes a three‑phase duty escalation model that practitioners should map onto their internal governance calendars:
Every board meeting held while a company is in or approaching the zone of insolvency should produce minutes that address the following items:
Experienced court appointees observe that the single most common deficiency in director conduct during the pre‑insolvency phase is the absence of contemporaneous records. Boards that can produce a clear paper trail, showing they considered creditor interests, obtained professional valuations and explored restructuring alternatives, are far less likely to face personal liability claims from a subsequently appointed trustee. Early indications suggest the draft amendment will codify this expectation, transforming what was previously best practice into a statutory requirement.
Practical takeaways: (1) Adopt the board memo checklist above immediately, it satisfies both current best practice and the proposed statutory standard. (2) Engage restructuring counsel at the first sign of cash‑flow stress, not after default. (3) Document every material decision with a creditor‑impact assessment.
The draft Companies Act amendments significantly strengthen the position of creditors during the critical pre‑insolvency and early insolvency phases. For practitioners advising creditor committees or individual lenders, the proposed changes create new monitoring tools and, in some cases, new avoidance powers that will reshape restructuring negotiations in Japan.
| Issue / Area | Current Law (Pre‑Draft) | Draft Amendment (Apr 2026), Practical Impact |
|---|---|---|
| Directors’ duty in the insolvency risk zone | Directors owe primarily shareholder duties until insolvency thresholds are met; limited express creditor focus | Draft clarifies timing and extent of creditor‑facing duties; increases documentation obligations, directors must demonstrate creditor‑interest consideration |
| Court‑appointed trustee powers | Traditional powers under Civil Rehabilitation / Bankruptcy Act; broad judicial discretion on scope | Draft proposes clearer statutory coordination points between Companies Act governance duties and trustee appointment / powers, including mandatory cooperation timelines |
| Share issuance and creditor notice | Standard shareholder approval regimes; no mandatory creditor notification | Draft tightens disclosure and minority‑protection mechanisms; introduces prior creditor notification for discounted issuances during distress periods |
| Transaction avoidance (pre‑insolvency) | Avoidance actions available primarily under Bankruptcy Act after filing | Draft introduces rebuttable presumption allowing challenge of zone‑of‑insolvency transactions under the Companies Act itself |
Secured creditors should note that the draft does not alter the priority framework under existing insolvency statutes. However, the new transaction‑avoidance provisions could affect the enforceability of security interests granted during the zone of insolvency if those interests are found to have impaired the position of unsecured creditors without adequate consideration. Unsecured creditors, conversely, gain a stronger platform: the creditor notification requirements for share issuances and asset disposals give unsecured creditors earlier visibility into transactions that could diminish the asset pool available for distribution.
Practical takeaways: (1) The insolvency implications of the Companies Act amendments are primarily procedural, not substantive, priority rankings are unchanged, but avoidance risks increase. (2) Creditor rights Japan advisers should treat the zone‑of‑insolvency notification requirements as a monitoring opportunity. (3) Update standard loan documentation to incorporate covenants referencing the new disclosure obligations.
Among the most significant practical changes in the companies act reform 2026 package are those affecting the appointment, powers and duties of court‑appointed officers. Currently, appointment criteria for trustees (kanzai‑nin), supervisors (kantoku iin) and examiners (chōsa iin) are largely left to judicial discretion, with qualifications assessed on a case‑by‑case basis.
The draft introduces codified minimum qualification standards and procedural duties. Court appointees should prepare for the following changes:
For restructurings with cross‑border elements, the draft’s emphasis on statutory cooperation duties and standardised reporting may facilitate recognition proceedings under the UNCITRAL Model Law on Cross‑Border Insolvency, which Japan adopted through the Act on Recognition of and Assistance for Foreign Insolvency Proceedings. The likely practical effect will be that foreign courts and practitioners find it easier to cooperate with Japanese appointees who operate within a clearly codified duty framework.
Practical takeaways: (1) Practitioners seeking court appointments should begin documenting their qualification credentials now. (2) Develop a template “state of affairs” request letter that can be issued on the day of appointment. (3) Establish internal protocols for the 7‑day document‑production timeline.
The Companies Act amendments do not exist in isolation. They interact directly with the Corporate Governance Code administered by the Japan Exchange Group (JPX) and developed with input from the FSA through the Council of Experts on the Stewardship Code and Corporate Governance Code. The FSA’s Japan Corporate Governance Forum has, in recent sessions, emphasised the expectation that listed companies will integrate creditor‑awareness into board‑level risk management, a position that now finds statutory expression in the draft.
For listed companies, the practical consequence is that compliance with the revised Companies Act will likely be assessed as part of the “comply or explain” framework under the Corporate Governance Code. Boards should update their basic policies on corporate governance to reference the new creditor‑duty provisions and ensure that audit committee charters incorporate the enhanced documentation standards. Industry observers expect the JPX to issue supplementary guidance linking the Code to the amended Act once the legislative process concludes.
Practical takeaways: (1) Review and update the company’s Corporate Governance Report (filed with JPX) to reflect the new duty framework. (2) Brief institutional investors and proxy advisers on the board’s preparedness. (3) Ensure the audit committee’s terms of reference cover the new documentation obligations.
The legislative timetable for the companies act public consultation and subsequent enactment remains subject to the Diet’s legislative calendar. Based on precedent from prior Companies Act amendment cycles, the anticipated milestones are as follows:
| Milestone | Estimated Timing | Action Required |
|---|---|---|
| MOJ interim draft and public consultation opens | April 2026 (confirmed) | Review draft; prepare consultation submissions |
| Public consultation closes | Late June – July 2026 (estimated) | Submit comments to MOJ; finalise internal gap analyses |
| MOJ finalises draft bill incorporating consultation feedback | Autumn 2026 (estimated) | Monitor revisions; update compliance plans |
| Submission to the Diet (National Legislature) | Early 2027 ordinary session (estimated) | Prepare implementation roadmaps |
| Enactment and promulgation | Mid‑2027 (estimated, subject to legislative process) | Finalise governance updates; train directors and officers |
| Effective date (with transitional provisions) | 2027–2028 (estimated) | Full compliance required; monitor MOJ transitional guidance |
The following templates can be adapted for immediate use by in‑house legal teams and restructuring advisers. They are designed to align with the documentation standards proposed in the draft amendments.
Template 1, Board Memo Checklist (Zone of Insolvency)
Template 2, Creditor Claim Preservation Notice
Template 3, Trustee / Supervisor Coordination Agenda (First 14 Days)
The Companies Act reform Japan is undergoing in 2026 represents the most consequential restructuring‑related legislative development in over a decade. With the MOJ public consultation open and a legislative timetable that could deliver enacted amendments by mid‑2027, the window for preparation is narrow. Directors need to update their governance protocols, creditors need to audit their security positions and monitoring systems, and court appointees need to align their practice procedures with the proposed statutory standards. Early and methodical preparation, using the checklists, templates and timelines set out above, is the most effective way to manage the transition. Practitioners seeking country‑specific restructuring guidance can find a Japan bankruptcy lawyer through the Global Law Experts directory.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Kanako Watanabe at Anderson Mori & Tomotsune, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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