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Thread: Hostess Brands is Closed

  1. #1
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    Hostess Brands is Closed

    Hostess Brands is Closed.

    We are sorry to announce that Hostess Brands, Inc. has been forced by a Bakers Union strike to shut down all operations and sell all company assets. For more information, go to hostessbrands.info. Thank you for all of your loyalty and support over the years.

    HOSTESS BRANDS TO WIND DOWN COMPANY AFTER BCTGM UNION STRIKE CRIPPLES OPERATIONS

    Friday, November 16, 2012 at 7:00AM

    Irving, TX – November 16, 2012 – Hostess Brands Inc. today announced that it is winding down operations and has filed a motion with the U.S. Bankruptcy Court seeking permission to close its business and sell its assets, including its iconic brands and facilities. Bakery operations have been suspended at all plants. Delivery of products will continue and Hostess Brands retail stores will remain open for several days in order to sell already-baked products.

    The Board of Directors authorized the wind down of Hostess Brands to preserve and maximize the value of the estate after one of the Company’s largest unions, the Bakery, Confectionery, Tobacco Workers and Grain Millers International Union (BCTGM), initiated a nationwide strike that crippled the Company’s ability to produce and deliver products at multiple facilities.

    On Nov. 12, Hostess Brands permanently closed three plants as a result of the work stoppage. On Nov. 14, the Company announced it would be forced to liquidate if sufficient employees did not return to work to restore normal operations by 5 p.m., EST p.m., Nov. 15. The Company determined on the night of Nov. 15 that an insufficient number of employees had returned to work to enable the restoration of normal operations.

    The BCTGM in September rejected a last, best and final offer from Hostess Brands designed to lower costs so that the Company could attract new financing and emerge from Chapter 11. Hostess Brands then received Court authority on Oct. 3 to unilaterally impose changes to the BCTGM’s collective bargaining agreements.

    Hostess Brands is unprofitable under its current cost structure, much of which is determined by union wages and pension costs. The offer to the BCTGM included wage, benefit and work rule concessions but also gave Hostess Brands’ 12 unions a 25 percent ownership stake in the company, representation on its Board of Directors and $100 million in reorganized Hostess Brands’ debt.

    “We deeply regret the necessity of today’s decision, but we do not have the financial resources to weather an extended nationwide strike,” said Gregory F. Rayburn, chief executive officer. “Hostess Brands will move promptly to lay off most of its 18,500-member workforce and focus on selling its assets to the highest bidders.”

    In addition to dozens of baking and distribution facilities around the country, Hostess Brands will sell its popular brands, including Hostess®, Drakes® and Dolly Madison®, which make iconic cake products such as Twinkies®, CupCakes, Ding Dongs®, Ho Ho’s®, Sno Balls® and Donettes®. Bread brands to be sold include Wonder®, Nature’s Pride ®, Merita®, Home Pride®, Butternut®, and Beefsteak®, among others.

    The wind down means the closure of 33 bakeries, 565 distribution centers, approximately 5,500 delivery routes and 570 bakery outlet stores throughout the United States.

    The Company said its debtor-in-possession lenders have agreed to allow the Company to continue to have access to the $75 million financing facility put in place at the start of the bankruptcy cases to fund the sale and wind down process, subject to U.S. Bankruptcy Court approval.

    The Company’s motion asks the Court for authority to continue to pay employees whose services are required during the wind-down period.

    For employees whose jobs will be eliminated, additional information can be found at hostessbrands.info . The website also contains information for customers and vendors. Most employees who lose their jobs should be eligible for government-provided unemployment benefits.
    Wow. Exactly as predicted by the Mayan Calendar....
    Gene Ching
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  2. #2
    Quote Originally Posted by GeneChing View Post
    Wow. Exactly as predicted by the Mayan Calendar....
    ohhhhhhh crap!!!! Twinkies were supposed to be the perfect post apocalyptic food what will we survive on now?

  3. #3
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    Is nothing sacred anymore !?!?!?!?!
    Psalms 144:1
    Praise be my Lord my Rock,
    He trains my hands for war, my fingers for battle !

  4. #4
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    Quote Originally Posted by sanjuro_ronin View Post
    Is nothing sacred anymore !?!?!?!?!
    Not since the first boo-boo hole was defiled, has anything been sacred.
    The weakest of all weak things is a virtue that has not been tested in the fire.
    ~ Mark Twain

    Everyone has a plan until they’ve been hit.
    ~ Joe Lewis

    A warrior may choose pacifism; others are condemned to it.
    ~ Author unknown

    "You don't feel lonely.Because you have a lively monkey"

    "Ninja can HURT the Spartan, but the Spartan can KILL the Ninja"

  5. #5
    Somebody will buy the patents and keep the products coming. That's a guarantee. So all you iron stomach motherfuckers will still have your comfort food. Nada worries!

  6. #6
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    Quote Originally Posted by MightyB View Post
    ohhhhhhh crap!!!! Twinkies were supposed to be the perfect post apocalyptic food what will we survive on now?
    im gonna eat people
    For whoso comes amongst many shall one day find that no one man is by so far the mightiest of all.

  7. #7
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    My mom used to pack a twinkie in my lunch when I was in elementary...

    ...every freaking school day. And she was a dietician by trade. I haven't had one in at least thirty years.

    Twinkies Maker Hostess Plans to Go Out of Business
    By REUTERS
    Published: November 16, 2012 at 2:19 PM ET

    (Reuters) - Hostess Brands Inc, the bankrupt maker of Twinkies snack cakes and loaves of Wonder Bread, is seeking a U.S. court's permission to go out of business after failing to get wage and benefit cuts from thousands of its striking bakery workers.

    The 82-year-old Hostess, which has about $2.5 billion in sales and is one of the largest wholesale bakers and distributors of breads and snack cakes in the United States, filed the request with the U.S. Bankruptcy Court in New York early Friday morning. A hearing on the matter is set for Monday.

    The Irving, Texas-based company said the liquidation would mean that most of its 18,500 employees would lose their jobs. Hostess immediately suspended operations at all of its 33 plants across the United States as it moves to start selling assets.

    "We'll be selling the brands and as much of the infrastructure as we can," said company spokesman Lance Ignon. "There is value in the brands. But some bakeries will never open again as bakeries."

    Ignon said the company made final deliveries on Friday of products made Thursday night. Hostess's top-selling products are its chocolate cupcakes, Twinkies cakes and its powdered sugar and frosted "Donettes."

    Hostess products, particularly the golden, cream-filled Twinkies cakes, are deeply ingrained in American pop culture and have long been packed in school children's lunch boxes. Entrepreneurs on auction site eBay Inc were asking as much as $100 for a box of 10 Twinkies by Friday morning.

    Raj Patel, owner of Sarah's Market in Cambridge, Massachusetts, said he was sorry to see the company go out of business.

    "It's been around for ages," said Patel, 40. "A lot of people are familiar with the brand and it's going to be tough for some people to do without."

    NOT INTERESTED IN BREAD

    Hostess blamed heavy debt and burdensome wage and pension obligations for its financial woes. It said a strike by members of the Bakery, Confectionery, Tobacco Workers and Grain Millers International Union (BCTGM), which began November 9, was the latest in years of labor troubles that had crippled the company's ability to restructure its finances and produce and deliver products at several facilities.

    But union officials and line workers said union workers had already agreed to a series of concessions over the years and the company had failed to invest in brand marketing and modernization of plants and trucks and had focused instead on enriching owners such as private equity firm Ripplewood Holdings and hedge funds Silver Point Capital and Monarch Alternative Capital.

    Officials at the three firms declined to comment.

    "Our members decided... they were not going to agree to another round of outrageous wage and benefit cuts and give up their pension only to see yet another management team fail and Wall Street vulture capitalists and 'restructuring specialists' walk away with untold millions of dollars," said BCTGM International Union President Frank Hurt.

    Picketing workers echoed the sentiment.

    "The people who are running this company are not interested in making bread," said Roger Harrison, 56, who bags buns at the Hostess plant in Lenexa, Kansas, and has been with the company for 35 years.

    "They are not in the baking industry; they are just interested in the money," said Harrison.

    The company had started implementing an 8 percent pay cut, a 20 percent increase in healthcare costs, and changes to pension and workday provisions when workers went on strike on November 9. Hostess had given employees a deadline to return to work on Thursday, but the union held firm, saying it had already given far more in concessions than workers could bear and that it would not bend further.

    "The union has been the death of this company," said a human resources manager who recently left Hostess.

    LONG LABOR BATTLES

    Hostess's battle with its workforce has brewed for years. Formerly known as Interstate Bakeries Corp (IBC), the company for decades was based in Kansas City, Missouri. It filed for bankruptcy in September 2004 and emerged in 2009 with a host of employee concessions from various unions.

    A source with knowledge of the situation who spoke on condition of anonymity said the company was well positioned when it emerged from bankruptcy in 2009, but the recession, a spike in commodity prices and consolidation of major competitors reshaped the landscape and forced more restructuring.

    "We tried to get the senior creditors and the unions together and it dragged on and on and on and the company got weak," said the source. "I'm still praying, literally, that something is worked out and they don't liquidate the business."

    When Hostess filed for bankruptcy protection in January of this year the company said it must withdraw from multi-employer pension plans, address legacy health and welfare costs and secure new capital to modernize its operations.

    The company has spent the last several months battling for wage cuts and other concessions from 12 unions representing Hostess workers. At one point earlier this year, Hostess had a potential outside equity investor lined up, but failure to gain pension relief from the Teamsters killed that option, the company said in its court filing Friday.

    The company submitted offers to both the Teamsters and the bakery union in August, in what the company said was a final effort to save the company. The Teamsters accepted the proposal but the bakery union balked.

    With court approval, Hostess implemented the contract changes in October. The bakery workers then launched strikes that disrupted operations at 24 bakeries. Hostess said the strikes were the final blow to the already "daunting obstacles" to reorganization.

    The company's court filing said that it hopes it can arrange the sale of groups of assets to be operated as going concerns.

    WIND-DOWN PLAN

    Hostess has 565 distribution centers and 570 bakery outlet stores, as well as the 33 bakeries. Besides Twinkies and Wonder Bread, its brands include Nature's Pride, Dolly Madison, Drake's, Butternut, Home Pride and Merita.

    The company said in Friday's court filing that it would probably take about a year to wind down. It will need about 3,200 employees to start that process, but only about 200 after the first few months.

    Hostess had been gauging acquisition interest for certain brands for months and in late September received "a number of potentially viable proposals" to purchase certain assets.

    SunTrust Robinson Humphrey analyst William Chappell Jr. said Flowers Foods Inc could be among the potential buyers for some Hostess assets. And he said the company's liquidation was a "positive step" for the sector because it will reduce the number of major vendors.

    In addition to Flowers, Bimbo Bakeries USA, a division of Mexico-based Grupo Bimbo, and Pepperidge Farm, a division of Campbell Soup Co, were considered prospective buyers, analysts said.

    It is not a given that all of the better-known brands will survive, analysts said. "I'd be surprised if the Twinkies brand isn't gone for good," said Timothy Ramey, analyst at D.A. Davidson & Co.

    The company has canceled all orders with its suppliers and said any product in transit would be returned to the shipper.

    The company's last operating report, filed with the bankruptcy court in late October, listed a net loss of $15.1 million for the four weeks that ended in late September, mostly due to restructuring charges and other expenses.

    The case is In re: Hostess Brands Inc, U.S. Bankruptcy Court, Southern District of New York, No. 12-22052.

    (Reporting by Carey Gillam in Kansas City and Jonathan Stempel in New York; Additional reporting by Tanya Agrawal in Bangalore, Ben Berkowitz and Nick Zieminski in New York; Editing by Lisa Von Ahn, Phil Berlowitz, Andre Grenon and Tim Dobbyn)
    Gene Ching
    Publisher www.KungFuMagazine.com
    Author of Shaolin Trips
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  8. #8
    I think I will miss wonder bread the most. I don't eat that crap, but it's nostalgic for me when I walk the bread aisle!

  9. #9
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    As a kid, before I got really serious about MA at 13, I used to get Twinkies and Snow Balls, a Slim Jim and a soda, and stuff my face every Saturday.

    I haven't eaten those things in decades, and since I don't eat gluten anymore, couldn't if I wanted to. But I do lament the lost jobs.

  10. #10
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    When I was a school kid...

    ...there was this bully how always tried to rob me of the twinkie in my lunch. In retrospect, there was a Freudian element there, but I didn't understand that as a kid. So one night, I hollowed out all of the cream filling in a twinkie and refilled it with alka-seltzer. The next day, I handed over my twinkie to that bully. I will never forget his face, silhouetted in the sunlight, as a torrent of foam gushed from his mouth. With the entire schoolyard laughing at him, that bully never dared mess with me again.

    That's my fondest twinkie memory.
    Gene Ching
    Publisher www.KungFuMagazine.com
    Author of Shaolin Trips
    Support our forum by getting your gear at MartialArtSmart

  11. #11
    Quote Originally Posted by Jimbo View Post
    As a kid, before I got really serious about MA at 13, I used to get Twinkies and Snow Balls, a Slim Jim and a soda, and stuff my face every Saturday.

    I haven't eaten those things in decades, and since I don't eat gluten anymore, couldn't if I wanted to. But I do lament the lost jobs.
    Yeah, I find that any crap foods makes me sick now. Long gone is the iron gut.

  12. #12
    Quote Originally Posted by Lucas View Post
    im gonna eat people
    LOL - just don't get the shakes, that's how they know you're a cannibal. Speaking of cannibals... If you are what you eat, does that mean cannibals are the only real humans?

  13. #13
    What do you mean by the shakes comment?

  14. #14
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    Quote Originally Posted by Jimbo View Post
    As a kid, before I got really serious about MA at 13, I used to get Twinkies and Snow Balls, a Slim Jim and a soda, and stuff my face every Saturday.

    I haven't eaten those things in decades, and since I don't eat gluten anymore, couldn't if I wanted to. But I do lament the lost jobs.

    Jobs were not exactly lost here. They were thrown away through greed. Labor unions demand the very blood of a company, denying them the ability to make a profit for themselves, and this means that they have no incentive to keep their doors open. It is just another example of one cutting off his own nose just to spite his face. It is going to be interesting to see what happens to all the funds and retirement pension money. I am sure that they thought the company would cave, not fold. They clearly put themselves out of work here.
    Jackie Lee

  15. #15
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    Quote Originally Posted by Lee Chiang Po View Post
    Jobs were not exactly lost here. They were thrown away through greed. Labor unions demand the very blood of a company, denying them the ability to make a profit for themselves, and this means that they have no incentive to keep their doors open. It is just another example of one cutting off his own nose just to spite his face. It is going to be interesting to see what happens to all the funds and retirement pension money. I am sure that they thought the company would cave, not fold. They clearly put themselves out of work here.
    Did you see the cuts? A solid 50% pay cut and drastically reduced pensions. Meanwhile, the CEO tripled his own salary.

    For most, the cuts would have made the job not worth it.
    The weakest of all weak things is a virtue that has not been tested in the fire.
    ~ Mark Twain

    Everyone has a plan until they’ve been hit.
    ~ Joe Lewis

    A warrior may choose pacifism; others are condemned to it.
    ~ Author unknown

    "You don't feel lonely.Because you have a lively monkey"

    "Ninja can HURT the Spartan, but the Spartan can KILL the Ninja"

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