Recent Media Coverage on Bankruptcies

February 25th, 2009

Thomas Oliver recently penned a piece for the Atlanta Journal Constitution in which he referred to my post Notable Bankruptcies of 2008. In The Year of Bankruptcy Mr. Oliver notes:

It has to happen. As painful as it is.

And there is no magic wand or legislative action or Federal Reserve printing press that can make it all right.

The laws of economics are stronger than any policy…

And so the deleveraging, or debt reduction, of the American economy continues…

Twenty years of excess leveraging can’t be worked out of the system in a normal recession…

I could not agree more with Mr. Oliver. As I explained in my post, I fully expect business bankruptcy filings to increase in 2009. Bankruptcies will likely increase to around 55,000. And as I expressed to Mr. Oliver, I would not be surprised to see bankruptcies surprise to the upside.

As with banks and financial institutions, for many firms in the broader economy, it’s not just a liquidity problem. It’s a solvency problem. Firms borrowed excessively, and at rates that were too cheap – not reflective of their inherent risk. All was fine as long as they were able to refinance the debt, and delay the day of reckoning.

But then the party ended.

We can analyze the situation and pretend that the problem affecting many of these firms is the lack of available credit; or, we can recognize the reality that, for many, their business strategies have serious flaws. I look at firms like Sirius XM (see So Long Sirius), Circuit City, Trump Entertainment, and Bearingpoint (among others) and can only conclude that these are not good firms suffering from unfortunate short-term liquidity problems. Rather, they are poorly managed firms in incredibly competitive markets. This makes their overall value propositions, market positions – or both – extremely unattractive.

Those are problems of the more permanent kind.

Share:
  • Digg
  • del.icio.us
  • Facebook
  • Mixx
  • SphereIt
Sphere: Related Content

One Response to “Recent Media Coverage on Bankruptcies”

  1. Ghayyour Says:

    I read your article, i agree with you. But my question is what you say about different wars going on in the world. Does it affects the financials of the country.
    Secondly, why the real estate value came down, was it a bubble or people does not have trust?
    I am a layman and does not know anything about finance and economics but I am making a report from my Business Strategy subject in MBA.

Leave a Reply