The debt-strapped publisher of Reader's Digest magazine, one of the country's largest consumer magazines, has agreed to file for bankruptcy protection with its borrowings cut by 75%, as another failure emerged from the recent wave of media-industry buyouts.
The agreement will turn over control of Reader's Digest Association to the company's lenders. The lenders, led by J.P. Morgan Chase, also include GE Capital, Aries Management, Merrill Lynch, Eaton Vance, Regiment Capital and DK Partners.
Private-equity firm Ripplewood Holdings, which led a $1.6 billion buyout of Reader's Digest in 2007, will give up its stake, the company said. The bankruptcy filing is a blow to Ripplewood as its Belgian affiliate pursues a purchase of Opel, the German auto unit of General Motors Co.
Reader's Digest owns a stable of other magazines and media properties, including Every Day With Rachael Ray and cooking Web site AllRecipes.com. The flagship magazine's circulation has been sliding for years, and recently Reader's Digest said it planned to cut out even more of its circulation, which currently stands at more than 8 million, down 12% from a year ago.
Reader's Digest and its lenders have agreed that the company will file for bankruptcy protection in order to convert a 'substantial portion' of its $1.6 billion in secured debt to equity. Some of the lenders will provide a $150 million debtor-in-possession loan to carry Reader's Digest through the bankruptcy process and beyond, the company said Monday. All told, Reader's Digest said it expects its debt load will be cut to $550 million from $2.2 billion.
Reader's Digest didn't pay a $27 million interest payment due Monday. The company said it would use a 30-day grace period to continue discussions with its lenders and that it plans to file for bankruptcy protection no later than the end of the grace period. The company's operations outside the U.S. aren't expected to be part of the bankruptcy filing.
The debtor-in-possession loan is new money for the company, meaning none of its existing loans are being rolled into the facility. Interest on the DIP is 10% over the London interbank offered rate, or Libor, with a Libor floor of 3.5%, according to Standard & Poor's LCD unit. This means that under no circumstances will the lenders earn less than 13.5% annual interest.
Shira Ovide / Kerry Grace Benn
2009年 08月 18日 10:46
美國《讀者文摘》將申請破產保護
美
國發行量最大的雜志《讀者文摘》(Reader's Digest)的出版商債務纏身﹐已同意申請破產保護﹐按 照協議﹐《讀者文摘》的控制權將移交給該公司的貸款方。
私 募股權公司Ripplewood Holdings於2007年主導了以16億美元收購《
《讀者文摘》擁 有眾多其他雜志和媒體資產﹐包括食品生活類雜志Every Day With Rachael Ray和烹飪網站AllRecipes.com。其最重要的《
《讀者文摘》與其貸款方已達成一致﹐該公司將申請破產保護﹐
《讀者文摘》沒有支付週一到期的一筆2,700萬美元的利息。
債務人持有破產資產貸款是為該公司提供的新資金﹐
Shira Ovide / Kerry Grace Benn
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