Regal owner Cineworld unveils restructuring deal after sale plan fails

Regal owner Cineworld has scrapped plans to sell its US, UK and Ireland businesses after failing to find a buyer, the cinema chain operator said on Monday, as it proposed a new debt restructuring plan.

The world’s second-largest cinema chain operator behind AMC Entertainment placed the majority of the business under Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection in September.

Under a new tentative deal with lenders it said it aimed to reduce debt by about $4.53 billion, mainly through creditors getting equity in a reorganized group.

It had net debt of $8.81 billion including lease liabilities as of June 2022.

The plan also includes raising $2.26 billion to emerge from bankruptcy this year.

“This agreement with our lenders represents a ‘vote-of-confidence’ in our business and significantly advances Cineworld towards achieving its long-term strategy in a changing entertainment environment,” CEO Mooky Greidinger said in a statement.


Regal movie theater
Under a new tentative deal with lenders, Regal owner Cineworld said it aimed to reduce debt by about $4.53 billion, mainly through creditors getting equity in a reorganized group.
ZUMAPRESS.com

“Cineworld has determined that, absent an all-cash bid significantly in excess of the value established under the proposed restructuring, the marketing process as it relates to the Group’s business in the US, the UK and Ireland will be terminated,” it said in a statement.

The company said it would continue to consider proposals for the sale of its ‘Rest of World’ business, which accounted for about 13% of its revenue in 2021 and comprises operations in Poland, the Czech Republic, Slovakia, Hungary, Bulgaria, Romania and Israel.

Private equity firm CVC Capital Partners and activist investor Elliott Management last month proposed separate takeover bids for its eastern Europe and Israeli operations, Sky News reported.


Cineworld  theater in Britain
Cineworld’s plan also includes raising $2.26 billion to emerge from bankruptcy this year.
REUTERS

Shares in the London-listed company are down more than 99% from an all-time high hit in 2017.

On Monday they tumbled as much as 38%.

The company reiterated that shareholders will be wiped out under its restructuring plans.

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