Auto Supplier Garrett Motion Nears Bankruptcy Sale to KPS -- Update
18 Septiembre 2020 - 5:05PM
Noticias Dow Jones
By Andrew Scurria and Alexander Gladstone
Garrett Motion Inc. is in talks to sell itself out of bankruptcy
to a private-equity firm, part of the auto supplier's strategy to
quell a commercial dispute over asbestos-injury payments with
Honeywell International Inc., according to people familiar with the
matter.
Rolle, Switzerland-based Garrett is nearing an agreement to file
for bankruptcy and tap private-equity firm KPS Capital Partners LP
as the leading bidder to take control of the company through the
chapter 11 proceeding, these people said.
The Wall Street Journal reported Thursday that Garrett was
considering filing for bankruptcy within weeks to weather a sales
slump stemming from the Covid-19 pandemic and costly obligations to
Honeywell, the company's former parent, over asbestos
liabilities.
Garrett is also negotiating for a roughly $250 million
bankruptcy loan from top lenders to fund operations during chapter
11, people familiar with the matter said.
Under the company's restructuring proposal, which could still
change, lenders would be paid nearly in full while some proceeds
from the company's asset sale would fund a trust that would pursue
litigation with Honeywell, these people said. The planned
bankruptcy would include marketing the company to other potential
buyers, one of the people said.
Garrett, KPS and Honeywell declined to comment. Garrett stock
fell 17% Friday to just over $2 a share, having declined from $10
in January.
The company's financial woes stem in part from its 2018 spinoff
from Honeywell. When they separated, the two companies agreed on
how to split up the costs of defending and settling asbestos claims
made by workers and others allegedly injured by Honeywell
products.
In December, Garrett sued for a court order unwinding the
reimbursement agreement, saying it unfairly favored Honeywell.
Honeywell has defended the spinoff deal and has agreed to defer
payments from Garrett through mid-2022 under certain
conditions.
The company had said in August it hired legal and financial
advisers to explore options to address a $1.4 billion debt load and
warned that shareholder value could be diminished or wiped out.
Covid-19 also has pressured Garrett Motion and other auto
suppliers throughout the U.S. as car companies have slowed down
production, laid off workers and burned through cash.
The company's plants are bracing for the steepest drop in demand
for automotive products since the 2008 financial crisis, Garrett
said in its latest quarterly report. While the company reopened
factories in China in the second quarter, the pandemic has forced
it to close or reduce production in other parts of the world.
Write to Andrew Scurria at Andrew.Scurria@wsj.com and Alexander
Gladstone at alexander.gladstone@wsj.com
(END) Dow Jones Newswires
September 18, 2020 17:50 ET (21:50 GMT)
Copyright (c) 2020 Dow Jones & Company, Inc.
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