US: Lear set for Chapter 11 bankruptcy filing

Author: | 2 July 2009

Vehicle seat specialist Lear is to become the latest US components company to file for Chapter 11 bankruptcy as the "fastest and most effective way" to reduce debt in the face of slumping global auto production.

The company said the reorganisation was supported by key secured lenders and bondholders and it had obtained US$500m in bankruptcy financing.

The planned Chapter 11 filing is the latest in a string of recent failures of component suppliers, highlighting the pressure they faced as vehicle production fell and key customers General Motors and Chrysler became bankrupt.

Lear said only it planned to file for bankruptcy shortly but did not specify timing. A syndicate of secured lenders led by JPMorgan and Citigroup agreed to provide $500m of debtor-in-possession financing for the bankruptcy that could be converted to exit financing once the supplier emerges from Chapter 11 protection.

Lear made sales worth $13.6bn last year and vehicle seats accounted for almost 80% of its sales. It is ranked the 11th largest global auto parts supplier by sales according to Automotive News. The company was founded in 1917 in Detroit, went public in 1994 and grew through a string of 18 major acquisitions since.

According to the US Motor & Equipment Manufacturers Association, at least 15 auto parts suppliers have filed for bankruptcy or had their assets seized by creditors this year including Visteon, Metaldyne and Noble International.

Lear chairman, CEO and president, Bob Rossiter said in a statement: "This restructuring is being undertaken to maximise the long-term value of the company. We intend to complete the restructuring as quickly as possible, and emerge as an even stronger and more competitive partner to our customers.

"We want to assure everyone... Lear is committed to positioning our business for sustainable success. We believe that the agreement in principle with the steering committees of our secured lenders and bondholders to support our plan of reorganisation will enable us to emerge expeditiously."

Sectors: Components, Financial

Companies: Lear, General Motors, Chrysler, Visteon, Noble International

View next/previous articles

Currently reading -

US: Lear set for Chapter 11 bankruptcy filing

There are currently no comments on this article

Be the first to comment on this article

Related research

Company Financials: Lear Corporation

IntroductionThe Company Financials offers insights into the financial performance of the company over last five years for about 1000 leading global companies. The datapack covers wealth of financial information relating to income statement, balance s...

Related articles

FEATURE: Ten things that shaped the automotive decade that was

As the decade dubbed 'the noughties' bows out, Dave Leggett looks back at the last ten years and considers some of the events and trends that helped shape the automotive decade. Here are his ten.

US: Hayes Lemmerz out of bankruptcy

Wheelmaker Hayes Lemmerz International has emerged from its voluntary Chapter 11 bankruptcy reorganisation. The 101-year-old company had filed for bankruptcy in May.

NETHERLANDS/US: Spyker submits revised Saab offer

Last-ditch negotiations to save Saab Automobile continued over the weekend after General Motors on Friday said talks with Spyker had ended and that the brand would be wound down. Spyker said on Sunday it had submitted a renewed offer with a deadline of 5pm EST (10pm GMT) today (21 December) "in the hopes of securing a future for Saab, its employees and the brand - despite the announcement that the winding down of Saab would begin".

Welcome to the home of automotive information, insight & intelligence

Not a member? Join here

Decrease font sizeDecrease font sizeDecrease font size Increase font sizeIncrease font sizeIncrease font size Comment on this article Email this to a friend Print this page