Bondholders that have raised billions to buy Energy Future Holdings Corp.'s prized business, Oncor, will get a shot at pulling off their deal, the Dallas energy company said Thursday.

Loaded with $42 billion in debt, Energy Future has been looking for a way out of bankruptcy since last year. Amended chapter 11 plan documents filed Thursday say the company is still weighing two options. But headed into a crucial phase in its hard-fought chapter 11 case, Energy Future believes a buyout offer for Oncor from junior bondholders, in an alliance with Hunt Consolidated Inc., is "the superior path" to the exit.

Besides Hunt, backers of the bondholder buyout include Anchorage Capital Group, Arrowgrass Capital Partners, Centerbridge Partners, the Blackstone Group's GSO subsidiary, Avenue Capital Group and Teacher Retirement System of Texas.

A cash-generating Texas transmissions business, Oncor operates free of the financial troubles that pushed Energy Future into chapter 11 protection. By some estimates, it is worth $19 billion. Until recently, it was destined for the bankruptcy auction block.

Energy Future scrapped plans to sell Oncor at auction after bondholders campaigned to capture the value for creditors, through an in-bankruptcy buyout.

However, Energy Future's hedging its bets, building into the chapter 11 plan a "stand-alone" option based on a debt-for-equity swap that would leave some creditors owning most of its stake in Oncor, and other creditors with cash.

Of the two options, reorganization or deal, the bondholder buyout offer is "in a more advanced state" of negotiations, Energy Future said. That is a switch for the company, which resisted bondholder overtures, citing the risk the deal wouldn't work.

Hunt Consolidated Energy Chief Executive Hunter L. Hunt said in a statement the bondholder and Hunt consortium is pleased its buyout plan is one of two options Energy Future is considering, and that the consortium hopes the proposal will be the final plan to be presented to the court for approval.

Even though the junior bondholders and Hunt have raised the money, more than $12 billion in debt and equity funding, the proposed in-bankruptcy takeover is considered a risky play.

Oncor is a regulated business, vital to the Texas power infrastructure. The Public Utility Commission of Texas has warned that the junior bondholder buyout might not pass muster. The proposal is based on boosting the value of Oncor by converting the business into a real-estate investment trust.

Hunt has successfully launched an operating energy REIT, but it is much smaller than the Oncor business, and regulators said they would take a hard look at any transformation of Oncor.

Mr. Hunt said the buyout consortium "will work closely with the Public Utility Commission of Texas and other stakeholders to demonstrate our commitment to a strong and robust Oncor, ensuring that it has the resources and Texas-based management required to meet the needs of its customers and its communities throughout the state."

No matter which of the two scenarios plays out for the Oncor-linked division, Energy Future plans to spin out its other major division, which runs electricity generating and retailing businesses, to appease senior creditors.

Thursday's court filings represent the latest in a series of strategy shifts from Energy Future, which arrived in bankruptcy with a turnaround strategy that it thought would get it out of bankruptcy very quickly. That restructuring fell apart in the face of heavy resistance from various groups of creditors.

Threatened with a slim recovery in Energy Future's case, junior bondholders raised enough money based on hopes of profits from Oncor to pay off creditors of the units that own the Oncor stake, in cash, in full. The ability to pay off some of the debts could limit the court fights that have afflicted Energy Future during its bankruptcy case, and ease the company out of bankruptcy with relative speed.

Energy Future's new chapter 11 plan is slated for preliminary review next month in the U.S. Bankruptcy Court in Wilmington, Del.

The debt weighing on the company is largely the result of a leveraged buyout of the business that was believed to be a reasonable deal at the time. Plunging prices for energy changed the financial picture, and pushed Energy Future into restructuring.

Write to Peg Brickley at peg.brickley@wsj.com

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