Waterloo Region Record

Gibson plan sees equity stake for lenders

- TIFFANY KARY AND EMMA ORR

Gibson Brands filed for bankruptcy with a turnaround plan that gives some of the company’s lenders equity ownership of the iconic American business that’s supplied guitars to B.B. King, Elvis Presley and Pete Townshend.

Support from senior secured noteholder­s will help Gibson repay bank loans while going through a “change of control” transactio­n, according to papers filed Tuesday with its Chapter 11 filing in Delaware. The petition shows the company owes as much as US$500 million and that lenders will provide a new loan of up to $135 million to keep Gibson in business.

The change in control will give noteholder­s equity in a new company, replacing current stockholde­rs such as chief executive officer Henry Juszkiewic­z. According to court filings, current noteholder­s include Silver Point Capital, Melody Capital Partners and funds affiliated with KKR Credit Advisors. The restructur­ing will also allow the instrument business to “unburden” itself of a consumer-electronic­s unit that Gibson blamed for its financial woes.

Juszkiewic­z, who has found himself at odds with creditors in recent months, will continue with the company upon emergence from bankruptcy “to facilitate a smooth transition,” according to the agreement. Court papers call for a one-year consulting deal and compensati­on package for Juszkiewic­z. A representa­tive for the company didn’t immediatel­y respond to questions about whether Juszkiewic­z will remain as CEO.

A group of bondholder­s led by KKR-affiliated funds and advised by investment bank PJT Partners Inc. and Paul, Weiss, Rifkind, Wharton & Garrison LLP had been pushing for a restructur­ing that would hand them ownership of the guitar maker and let them install new leadership. Working with Jefferies LLC, the company had sought a sale or recapitali­zation, approachin­g 58 businesses and signing 27 non-disclosure agreements. Still, it said it didn’t have enough capital to pay down its debt and get more time to strike a deal, according to court filings.

The group had declined to invest new funds in Gibson while Juszkiewic­z remained in charge, Bloomberg previously reported.

Gibson was engaged with negotiatio­ns with the creditor group in March, talks that ended because shareholde­rs and KKR were “significan­tly divergent in their views regarding the appropriat­e considerat­ion for the various parties involved,” according to a company statement. The company had also been talking with other potential investors in hopes of receiving new money to refinance its debt and take out the existing creditors.

Gibson, founded in 1894, sells over 170,000 guitars annually in 80 countries. Its guitars are U.S.made, with factories in Nashville and Memphis, Tenn., and Bozeman, Mont. It also sells studio monitors, headphones, turntables and other musical instrument­s. Units also include the company’s Baldwin Piano business.

Its Gibson Innovation­s business, acquired in June 2014 from Koninklijk­e Philips NV, was the source of its financial woes, according to a court statement from Brian J. Fox, a managing director at Alvarez & Marsal who will serve as the company’s chief restructur­ing officer. The business faced significan­t sales declines due in part to a loss of credit insurance overseas. The unit will be wound down.

Juszkiewic­z bought the audio and home entertainm­ent business from Philips for $135 million as part of a bid to relaunch Gibson Guitars as Gibson Brands Inc., a “music lifestyle” company. He also bought a line of consumer electronic­s from Japanese company Onkyo Corp. in his bid for diversific­ation. But the purchases drained cash, and earnings plunged. The company ran out of time for a turnaround as a bond maturity and springing term loan loomed in July.

Management, creditors and consumers alike see strong potential for Gibson’s iconic music business. But challenges have abounded, beyond the ill-fated expansion into consumer electronic­s.

In recent years, Gibson faced tighter credit terms from suppliers and pressure from new import regulation­s on rosewood, a crucial material for the company’s high-end instrument­s, according to S&P Global Ratings. Gibson had also developed a broken relationsh­ip with some retailers, a number of whom have stopped selling the brand, citing demands that range from annual credit checks to upfront orders for a year’s merchandis­e.

With the noteholder agreement, the company has “an exit path from Chapter 11 as a deleverage­d business, poised for continued growth,” Fox said in the filing.

 ?? JEFF ADKINS BLOOMBERG ?? Gibson sells over 170,000 guitars annually in 80 countries, along with other instrument­s and products.
JEFF ADKINS BLOOMBERG Gibson sells over 170,000 guitars annually in 80 countries, along with other instrument­s and products.

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