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US guitar-maker Gibson files for bankruptcy

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WASHINGTON: Gibson Brands Inc, the maker of guitars played by the likes of BB King and Elvis Presley, filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection on Tuesday with a plan to reorganise its musical instrument business under the new ownership of its lenders.


Nashville-based Gibson, whose legendary brands include Les Paul and SG, has been suffering under $500 million in debt linked to the acquisition of its consumer electronics business overseas, where sales have been in sharp decline.


In a filing in US Bankruptcy Court in Delaware, Gibson said the overseas consumer electronics business will be wound down, allowing it to re-focus on its core guitar-making and audio businesses.


The audio business includes KRK, Cerwin Vega and Stanton headphones, loud speakers and turntables for amateur and professional musicians and sound engineers.


“This process will be virtually invisible to customers, all of whom can continue to rely on Gibson to provide unparalleled products and customer service,” Chief Executive Henry Juszkiewicz said in a press release. Under a restructuring pact, senior lenders including Silver Point Capital, Melody Capital Partners LP and funds affiliated with KKR Credit Advisors will exchange debt for equity ownership in the reorganised company.


Gibson said sales of its electric guitars grew 10.5 per cent to $122 million in the 12 months through January from a year earlier.


Gibson, founded in 1894, makes its electric guitars in US factories in Nashville and Memphis, Tennessee and its acoustic guitars in Bozeman, Montana. It sells more than 170,000 guitars annually in more than 80 countries.


It bought the Hong Kong-based consumer electronics arm from Philips in 2014, and started to wind down the unsuccessful business on April 30, according to court


papers. — Reuters


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