总部位于伊利诺州包含北电Robert Wang发明的Instant Pot 的Instant Brands申请破产

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Instant Brands, maker of Instant Pot and Pyrex cookware, files for bankruptcy​



U.S. company traces origins to Canadian inventor of eponymous cooking device​


Pete Evans - CBC News

Posted: 2 Hours Ago
Last Updated: 31 Minutes Ago

1686673714315.png

Inventor and former Nortel engineer Robert Wang poses with some Instant Brands products. The company formed when Wang merged his shop with Illinois-based Corelle Brands in 2019. (Idil Mussa/CBC)

The company that makes kitchen staples like CorningWare, Pyrex and the Instant Pot has entered bankruptcy proceedings in the U.S. and Canada.

Illinois-based Instant Brands said Monday that it has "initiated a voluntary court-supervised Chapter 11 process," due to an unmanageable debt load.

"Tightening of credit terms and higher interest rates impacted our liquidity levels and made our capital structure unsustainable," CEO Ben Gadbois said in a news release.

The company has $563 million US of debt on its books, according to Bloomberg, and doesn't currently turn a profit. Ratings agency S&P downgraded the company last week and warned that "absent external funding or debt relief, we anticipate Instant Brands will face a liquidity shortfall over the near term."

Rise and fall​

The company's current tough times are a marked reversal from the explosive growth the company was seeing a few years ago. Most of that came from the Instant Pot, which was invented by former Nortel engineer Robert Wang in Ottawa in 2009.

Prior to the pandemic, Wang's company was selling hundreds of millions of dollars of the devices every year. It was one of the top sellers on Amazon's annual Prime Day.


In 2019, his company merged with Illinois-based Corelle Brands, the owner of Pyrex, CorningWare, SnapWare and Corelle. The company, which also includes brands like Chicago Cutlery and Visions, claims that 90 per cent of households in the U.S. have at least one of their products in them.

The combined company soon expanded the Instant brand name into new products beyond its eponymous cooking device, including air purifiers and coffee machines.

But those new Instant-branded gadgets weren't enough to turn the tide of slowing sales. According to S&P, the company's sales declined by almost 22 per cent in the first quarter of 2023, the seventh quarterly contraction in a row.

"The company's performance continues to deteriorate amid a weakening macro environment and lower consumer spending on discretionary categories," S&P says.
In 2021, at the height of its popularity, the company borrowed $450 million US worth of bonds, due in 2028, to expand its business. Those bonds were changing hands on Tuesday at 22 cents on the dollar — a sign investors don't think there's much chance they'll get their money back.

Alongside the U.S. bankruptcy proceedings, Instant Brands "is commencing ancillary proceedings in Canada under the Companies' Creditors Arrangement Act," the company said.

Broadly speaking, the CCAA is the Canadian equivalent of Chapter 11 of the U.S. bankruptcy code. Companies enter both processes when they are seeking the court's help to protect them from their creditors while they try to come up with a way to restructure the business and continue to operate.
 
真可惜,做企业,品牌经营真心不易!
 
出啥事了,这个品牌卖的很好啊,前几年有新闻说被哪个大厂收购了。
 
Instant Pot不是用的人很多吗?还可以用来催芽。
 
出啥事了,这个品牌卖的很好啊,前几年有新闻说被哪个大厂收购了。
说是前年就太多债,4.5亿。

In 2021, at the height of its popularity, the company borrowed $450 million US worth of bonds, due in 2028, to expand its business. Those bonds were changing hands on Tuesday at 22 cents on the dollar — a sign investors don't think there's much chance they'll get their money back.
 
真不懂,发明个锅还用提北电的头衔。
 
说是前年就太多债,4.5亿。

In 2021, at the height of its popularity, the company borrowed $450 million US worth of bonds, due in 2028, to expand its business. Those bonds were changing hands on Tuesday at 22 cents on the dollar — a sign investors don't think there's much chance they'll get their money back.
扩张太快,产品本身卖得就不敢太贵,分市场的多,很难做太大
 

Instant Brands, maker of Instant Pot and Pyrex cookware, files for bankruptcy​



U.S. company traces origins to Canadian inventor of eponymous cooking device​


Pete Evans - CBC News

Posted: 2 Hours Ago
Last Updated: 31 Minutes Ago

浏览附件1099079
Inventor and former Nortel engineer Robert Wang poses with some Instant Brands products. The company formed when Wang merged his shop with Illinois-based Corelle Brands in 2019. (Idil Mussa/CBC)

The company that makes kitchen staples like CorningWare, Pyrex and the Instant Pot has entered bankruptcy proceedings in the U.S. and Canada.

Illinois-based Instant Brands said Monday that it has "initiated a voluntary court-supervised Chapter 11 process," due to an unmanageable debt load.

"Tightening of credit terms and higher interest rates impacted our liquidity levels and made our capital structure unsustainable," CEO Ben Gadbois said in a news release.

The company has $563 million US of debt on its books, according to Bloomberg, and doesn't currently turn a profit. Ratings agency S&P downgraded the company last week and warned that "absent external funding or debt relief, we anticipate Instant Brands will face a liquidity shortfall over the near term."

Rise and fall​

The company's current tough times are a marked reversal from the explosive growth the company was seeing a few years ago. Most of that came from the Instant Pot, which was invented by former Nortel engineer Robert Wang in Ottawa in 2009.

Prior to the pandemic, Wang's company was selling hundreds of millions of dollars of the devices every year. It was one of the top sellers on Amazon's annual Prime Day.


In 2019, his company merged with Illinois-based Corelle Brands, the owner of Pyrex, CorningWare, SnapWare and Corelle. The company, which also includes brands like Chicago Cutlery and Visions, claims that 90 per cent of households in the U.S. have at least one of their products in them.

The combined company soon expanded the Instant brand name into new products beyond its eponymous cooking device, including air purifiers and coffee machines.

But those new Instant-branded gadgets weren't enough to turn the tide of slowing sales. According to S&P, the company's sales declined by almost 22 per cent in the first quarter of 2023, the seventh quarterly contraction in a row.

"The company's performance continues to deteriorate amid a weakening macro environment and lower consumer spending on discretionary categories," S&P says.
In 2021, at the height of its popularity, the company borrowed $450 million US worth of bonds, due in 2028, to expand its business. Those bonds were changing hands on Tuesday at 22 cents on the dollar — a sign investors don't think there's much chance they'll get their money back.

Alongside the U.S. bankruptcy proceedings, Instant Brands "is commencing ancillary proceedings in Canada under the Companies' Creditors Arrangement Act," the company said.

Broadly speaking, the CCAA is the Canadian equivalent of Chapter 11 of the U.S. bankruptcy code. Companies enter both processes when they are seeking the court's help to protect them from their creditors while they try to come up with a way to restructure the business and continue to operate.

发明人早就赚足了钱,估计并购的时候拿到了不是股票和钱。。。现在破产的是公司,发明人没什么损失。接着发明创造新产品。

就像当年的YouTube,只不过YouTube后来成功了。
 
挺好用的锅,我还囤了一个
 
资不抵债呗

跟锅好锅坏关系不大。
 
Go under? or financial engineering? I think it is more like the latter.

The bankruptcy filing under Chapter 11 allows a company to stay in business as it sheds debt. Several companies have filed for bankruptcy in a similar manner in the past, including General Motors and most of the nation’s major airlines...

" ... In 2021, at the height of its popularity, Instant Brands borrowed $450 million US worth of bonds, due in 2028, to expand its business. Those bonds were changing hands on Tuesday at 22 cents on the dollar — a sign investors don't think there's much chance they'll get their money back...."

DOWNERS GROVE, Ill., June 12, 2023 /PRNewswire/ -- "Instant Brands and certain of its affiliates have initiated a voluntary court-supervised Chapter 11 process that provides the Company time and flexibility to continue ongoing discussions with all of its financial stakeholders in an effort to achieve a consensual path forward that strengthens the Company's financial position."

"In connection with the court-supervised process, Instant Brands has received a commitment for $132.5 million in new debtor-in-possession financing from its existing lenders. Following court approval, this new financing, combined with cash generated from the Company's ongoing operations, is expected to support the business during the court-supervised process.

But there is a cost for it: its credit rating will be downgraded.

You owe a bank a million, you are in trouble; you owe a bank (the creditor) 100 million, and the bank is in trouble.
 
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