Airopack's debt revamp collapses, cites accounting issues
* Lenders including Apollo want their money
* Recapitalisation plan collapses
* Airopack says ex-managers overstated forecasts
(Adds details about sales forecasts)
By John Miller
ZURICH, Feb 11 (Reuters) - Airopack's
recapitalisation plan collapsed as lenders including Apollo
Global Management demanded repayment following the
discovery of "inadequate sales and accounting practices", the
Swiss aerosol packaging maker said on Monday.
Shares in the company, which makes plastic aerosol
dispensers for Procter & Gamble's Gillette shaving cream,
fell as much as 60 percent and have lost almost all their value
since hitting 13.5 Swiss francs ($13.46) three years ago.
Airopack, whose net loss topped 40 million euros ($45.3
million) in 2017, has been seeking to slash debt via a
recapitalisation plan announced on Nov. 30.
Its largest lender, U.S.-based private equity firm Apollo
, was to have received a controlling share in the deal.
But developments since then, including the discovery of what
Airopack described as "excessively overstated" sales forecasts
by former managers, now make the recapitalisation plan
"completely unachievable".
Airopack's lenders, including Apollo and a major bank, on
Saturday demanded repayment of loans in excess of $100 million.
Airopack said it would seek a short period of debt relief
with Swiss courts in order to gain breathing room, negotiate
with lenders and seek to avoid bankruptcy proceedings.
An Airopack spokeswoman said a court in Zug, near the
company's headquarters in Baar, would consider the request.
There was no projected deadline for a decision.
The company said its major lenders did agree to extend a 15
million euro loan, with a possibility of 10 million more, to
keep operating units afloat in the short- and mid-term.
An Apollo spokesman in London did not immediately comment.
Problems intensified as Airopack merged its manufacturing at
a new plant in 2017, taking on more and more debt from Apollo to
help keep things running. Production of aerosols trailed
expectations, however, as it tripled employees to 180 last year.
Financing costs escalated and losses ballooned, requiring
the recapitalisation deal that collapsed amid rising concerns
over accounting practices.
Airopack said that in addition to inflated sales forecasts,
a review started by PriceWaterhouseCoopers in December found
"certain inadequate sales and accounting practices that will
lead to corrections in the accounting and caused a severe lack
of cost-control in the months prior to the announced
recapitalisation plan".
The board "is preparing the adequate procedural steps
against former management and will coordinate such steps with
the court-appointed administrator", the company said.
It did not provide contact details for Airopack co-founder
Quint Kelders, who resigned as CEO last year as the
recapitalisation plan was announced. He could not immediately be
reached for comment via email and LinkedIn.
Kelders's family owns 30 percent of Airopack, while Apollo
controls about 23 percent of shares.
($1 = 1.0029 Swiss francs)
($1 = 0.8827 euros)
(Reporting by John Miller; editing by Michael Shields and
Louise Heavens)
2019-02-11 13:16:55
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