US bankruptcy laws award special treatment to holders of certain derivatives and other financial contracts that may have yielded unintended consequences during the financial crisis.
The bankruptcy process lets companies cut costs and financially rehabilitate, rather than marking the first step of their extinction. Broker-dealers such as Lehman are not eligible for reorganisation and are instead wound down in court, where counterparties and creditors whose claims have been frozen are forced to haggle over the remaining spoils.

US banks 

