Canadian Manufacturing

Battery maker Exide Technologies seeks bankruptcy protection

by The Associated Press   

Canadian Manufacturing
Operations Procurement Automotive Energy Bankruptcy


Company said its international operations excluded from Chapter 11 filing

MILTON, Ga.—Battery maker Exide Technologies is seeking Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection as it attempts to restructure its American business.

The Milton, Ga., company said its international operations are excluded from the filing, which it made in United States Bankruptcy Court in Delaware.

Exide Technologies makes batteries for vehicles and also provides stored electrical energy services for industrial applications.

It said a highly leveraged balance sheet has limited its ability to invest in its businesses, and unprecedented increases in product costs have hurt its balance sheet.

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Those increases have been driven mainly by the North American market price for scrap lead.

Exide’s voluntary petition for Chapter 11 protection prevents debt collectors from collecting amounts owed by the company.

It does not change the work schedules of its plants, corporate offices or branches, and the company expects to continue serving both U.S. and international customers.

The company also said it plans to pay U.S. employees as usual, and it does not expect material changes to their benefits.

Exide says it has negotiated $500-million in financing that will help cover operating expenses after the filing.

Its board of directors also has named Robert M. Caruso chief restructuring officer.

Caruso is a managing director of the restructuring firm Alvarez and Marsal.

The battery maker said in April it had hired the financial advisory firm Lazard to help it explore financing options.

It had reported a string of quarterly losses before then.

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