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Interstate Bakeries

Old HB, Inc.,[2] known as Hostess Brands from 2009 to 2013 and established in 1930 as Interstate Bakeries Corporation, was a wholesale baker and distributor of bakery products in the United States.[3] Before its 2012 closure and liquidation, it owned the Hostess, Wonder Bread, Nature's Pride, Dolly Madison, Butternut Breads, and Drake's brands.

Old HB, Inc.
Company typePrivate
IndustryFood (bakery)
Founded1930; 94 years ago (1930)
DefunctNovember 21, 2012; 11 years ago (2012-11-21)
FateBankruptcy
SuccessorHostess Brands
HeadquartersIrving, Texas, United States
Key people
Gregory F. Rayburn, CEO
ProductsBrands such as Wonder Bread (US only), Hostess, Nature's Pride, Merita Breads, Home Pride, and Dolly Madison
Revenue$2.8 billion (2008)[1]
$144 million (2008)
Total equity$462 million (2008)

For many years the company was called Interstate Bakeries and based at 12 East Armour Boulevard, Kansas City, Missouri. In 2009, after it emerged from a 2004 bankruptcy, its name was changed to Hostess Brands and its headquarters moved to Irving, Texas.[4] Hostess Brands sought bankruptcy protection again in January 2012.[5]

On November 16, 2012, the company filed a motion in United States Bankruptcy Court for the Southern District of New York in White Plains to close its business and sell its assets. On November 21, the motion was accepted[6] and a judge agreed to sell the Hostess brands.[7][8] The Hostess and Dolly Madison brands are now produced by Hostess Brands, itself was acquired by The J.M. Smucker Company.[9]

History edit

 
Former headquarters on Armour Boulevard in Kansas City (later the operations center).
 
Former Interstate Bakeries logo

Interstate Bakeries and Interstate Brands edit

The company has its roots in Nafziger Bakeries, founded by Ralph Leroy Nafziger in a church basement at 6th and Prospect Avenue in Kansas City in 1905. Nafziger expanded the bakeries and bought out competitors. In 1925 he sold Nafziger to Purity Bakeries[10] (which became American Bakeries) and acquired a controlling interest in Schulze Baking Company and its Butternut Breads brand.[11]

In 1930 Nafziger announced the formation of the Interstate Bakeries Corporation (IBC) with the merger of Schulze Bakery and the seven bakers of Western Bakeries of Los Angeles to become the fifth largest baker in the United States.[12][13] The company sold Butternut bread, wrapped in gingham, to grocery stores.[11]

Schulze and Western continued to operate separately under the Interstate umbrella until 1937, when they merged with Interstate Bakeries.[14][15] In 1943 Interstate acquired the Supreme Baking Company of Los Angeles, and in 1950 it bought the O'Rourke Baking Company of Buffalo, New York.

 
Butter-Nut bread package, 1930–1945

Acquisitions during the 1950s and early 1960s included the Ambrosia, Remar, Butter Cream, Campbell-Sell and Schall Tasty baking companies, the Kingston Cake and Cobb's Sunlit bakeries, Sweetheart Bread Company and Hart's Bakeries.[15] In the late 1960s IBC acquired Millbrook Bread, Shawano Farms and the Baker and Shawano canning companies.[15] In 1969 IBC changed its name to Interstate Brands, with its signature brands Butternut and Blue Seal breads and Dolly Madison cakes; Butternut Breads had been in business since 1902.[15]

DPF (1975) edit

In 1975 Interstate was acquired by the Data Processing Financial and General Corporation (DPF), a computer-leasing company that had encountered difficulties during the IBM antitrust battles which changed the pricing of IBM hardware. To change its business model, DPF used its cash to buy a low-tech company. The merged company, headquartered in Hartsdale, New York, kept the DPF acronym while continuing to divest its remaining technology assets. Investing heavily in its plants, it acquired the Silver Loaf Baking Company, Eddy Bakeries and Mrs. Cubbison's Foods.[15]

Interstate Bakeries and IBC Holdings edit

In 1981 DPF completed the sale of its remaining computer systems and changed the company name back to the original Interstate Bakeries, moving its headquarters back to Kansas City.[15] In 1986 Interstate acquired Purity Baking Company and Stewart Sandwiches, followed in 1987 by Landshire Food Products.[15] The following year Interstate became a privately held company, and its name changed to IBC Holdings. IBC bought the Merita-Cotton's Bakeries division of the American Bakeries Company.[15] In 1991, IBC again became a public company and changed its name back to Interstate Bakeries.[15]

 
Interstate Bakeries Hostess delivery truck

Continental Baking merger (1995) edit

In January 1995, Interstate acquired the Continental Baking Company from Ralston Purina for $330 million and 16.9 million shares of Interstate stock. Continental had acquired Taggart Bakeries of Indianapolis in 1925,[16] and the deal brought Taggart's creations (including Wonder Bread and the Hostess brand) to Interstate. Taggart had created Hostess in 1921, and the brand focused on cakes like Twinkies, CupCakes, Ding Dongs and Ho Hos (created during Continental's ownership).[17] At this time, the merged company also bought the San Francisco French Bread Company, John J. Nissen Baking Company, Drake's and My Bread Company.[15]

With the merger, Interstate held two national bread divisions: Butternut and Wonder Bread. The divisions had different cultures: Butternut was unregimented, with each bakery a self-contained profit center, and Wonder Bread was structured; this caused early problems. In both divisions, snack cakes were more profitable due to economy of scale and logistics. When extended-shelf-life enzymes were developed for bread, it was hoped to convert small, less-efficient bakeries into a network of large bakeries like their snack-cakes operations. The new enzymes gave the bread a different taste and texture,[18] and market forces reduced prices and sales.

Bankruptcy (2004) edit

On September 22, 2004, Interstate Bakeries filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy.[19] The company named a new chief executive, Tony Alvarez. Interstate Bakery's stock, which had been $34 per share, fell to $2.05 with the bankruptcy. During the bankruptcy proceedings (at the time, the longest-running in U.S. history), Interstate fought a 2007 bid from Mexican baker Grupo Bimbo and Ron Burkle of the Yucaipa Companies.[20]

Under Craig Jung, Interstate Bakeries emerged from bankruptcy as a private company on February 3, 2009.[21] The plan included a 50-percent equity stake by Ripplewood Holdings and credit lines from General Electric Capital and GE Capital Markets, Silver Point Finance and Monarch Master Funding. Interstate's unionized workers made contract concessions in exchange for equity in the company.[22]

During the 2004–2009 bankruptcy period Interstate closed nine of its 54 bakeries and more than 300 outlet stores, and its workforce declined from 32,000 to 22,000. The company dropped regional brands and operating agreements, such as an agreement to produce Sunbeam Bread for the northeastern U.S.[22]

Hostess Brands (2009) edit

On November 2, 2009, IBC became Hostess Brands, named for its Twinkies-and-cupcakes cake division. Hostess Brands continued its bread lines, including Wonder Bread.[23] The company's subsidiaries, such as Interstate Brands Corporation and IBC Sales Corporation, continued displaying their name and logo on Hostess Brands products.

Bankruptcy and liquidation edit

In December 2011, it was reported that Hostess Brands was on the verge of filing for bankruptcy a second time. The company stopped paying future pension benefits after August, breaking its union contracts.[24] According to a Hostess employee, "We understand that, should we pursue some form of legal action to require the company to live up to the terms of the contract, they may close, but we have come to believe that they will close anyway. We believe the company is poorly managed and the only hope is a complete change in management".[24]

On January 10, 2012, Hostess Brands filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy for the second time. In its filing, the company said it "is not competitive, primarily due to legacy pension and medical benefit obligations and restrictive work rules". According to Hostess, it employed 19,000 people and was more than $860 million in debt. The company said it would continue to operate with $75 million of debtor-in-possession financing from Monarch Alternative Capital, Silver Point Capital and other investors.[5]

In March Brian Driscoll resigned as CEO[25] and was replaced by Gregory F. Rayburn, who had been hired as chief restructuring officer nine days earlier. Fortune reported that unions in the company were unhappy with Driscoll's proposed compensation package of $1.5 million, plus cash incentives and $1.95 million in long-term compensation. The court had discovered that Hostess executives received raises of up to 80 percent the previous year. Rayburn cut the salaries of the four top Hostess executives to $1, to be restored by January 1 of the following year or earlier.[26]

In July 2012, the New York Post reported that negotiations with the Teamsters Union, led by Silver Point Capital, were close to an agreement allowing Hostess Brands to cut employee pay and benefits if the company continued funding its pension plans.[27] In May, as required by the Worker Adjustment and Retraining Notification Act, the company's 19,000 workers were warned of a possible layoff. In an email to the Marysville, California Appeal-Democrat, Hostess spokesman Erik Halvorson wrote that the May notices were to alert employees to a possible sale of the company but "our goal is still to emerge from bankruptcy as a growing company with a strong future".[28] Although the layoff notices listed July 7–21 as dates, on July 5 another company spokesman told the Financial News & Daily Record that there were no immediate plans to lay off Hostess employees.[29]

In November 2012, Hostess employees nationwide went on strike. The Bakery, Confectionery, Tobacco Workers and Grain Millers' International Union (BCTGM), representing 6,600 Hostess employees, took action after a contract proposal from Hostess Brands was rejected by 92 percent of its members.[30]

On November 16, Hostess announced that it was ceasing its plant operations and laying off most of its 18,500 employees. The company said that it intended to sell off its assets (including its well-known brand names) and liquidate.[31][32] According to CEO Gregory Rayburn, "Hostess Brands will move promptly to lay off most of its 18,500-member workforce and focus on selling its assets to the highest bidders."[33][34] A BCTGM press release issued that day read in part, "When a highly-respected financial consultant, hired by Hostess, determined earlier this year that the company's business plan to exit bankruptcy was guaranteed to fail because it left the company with unsustainable debt levels, our members knew that the massive wage and benefit concessions the company was demanding would go straight to Wall Street investors and not back into the company."[35]

According to Rayburn, potential buyers expressed interest in acquiring the Hostess brand.[36] On November 21, Judge Robert Drain cleared Hostess to close.[6] In approving the plan, Drain ruled against U.S. Trustee for the Southern District Tracy Hope Davis' motion to convert the bankruptcy to a Chapter 7 bankruptcy with an appointed trustee to oversee liquidation. Davis criticized the plan's provisions, which would "'grant bonuses to insiders' and 'cherry-pick' which administrative claims get paid".[37] Drain left Rayburn in charge of the liquidation; Hostess had argued that its assets would devalue if the company had to wait for a trustee to get up to speed on the company.[38] Hostess Brands' liquidation plan was finalized by a federal bankruptcy judge on November 29.[39] In January 2013, the company asked a judge to set a March 21 deadline for workers to file back-pay claims.[40] On February 11, a U.S. Bankruptcy Court judge in New York approved stalking horse bidders for Hostess Brands.[41][42][43][44]

The company received bids for assets from Walmart, Target, Kroger, Flowers Foods and Grupo Bimbo,[45][46][47][48] and was expected to sell its snack-cake and bread brands during 2013.[49][50][51][52] On January 8, 2013, Hostess Brands hired Hilco to sell its equipment, machinery and real estate.[53] Three days later the company announced a $390 million stalking-horse bid by Flowers Foods for six of its bread brands (including Wonder Bread),[54] and court approval was received for a February 28 auction of the brands.[55]

On January 15, 2013, Hostess Brands began searching for a stalking-horse bidder for its snack cakes;[56] four companies (Grupo Bimbo, a partnership of Apollo Global Management and C. Dean Metropoulos and Company, Hurst Capital and McKee Foods) were negotiating.[57][58][59] Two weeks later the company picked Apollo Global Management and C. Dean Metropoulos and Company as lead bidder for its snack cakes,[60][61][62][63] with the bid deadlines for all Hostess brands March 11 and 12.[64]

Buyers edit

It was announced on January 28, 2013 that United States Bakery was the leading bidder for Hostess' Sweetheart, Eddy's, Standish Farms and Grandma Emilie's brands and McKee Foods was the leading bidder for its Drake's brand, which included Ring Dings, Yodels and Drake's Devil Dogs.[65][66] On March 11 Apollo Global Management made the sole bid ($410 million) for the company's snack business, which included Twinkies; this company later went public under the name Hostess Brands and trade on the New York Stock Exchange under ticker TWNK.[67] On 11 September 2023, The J.M. Smucker Company announced it would buy Hostess for $5.6 billion in a cash and stock deal.

Hostess Brands edit

On June 6, 2013, the new Hostess Brands reopened the Emporia, Kansas plant.[68] Hostess announced ten days later that production would resume the following month, and on June 23 said that its brands would be back on store shelves on July 15.[69][70] although the company would sell fewer products than before, new president Rich Seban said that it might produce innovative pastries and snacks. "We can have some fun with that mixture," Seban said, suggesting that Hostess might experiment with gluten-free, higher-fiber and lower-sugar and -sodium products.[71]

Brands edit

Sold to Apollo and Metropoulos, later J.M. Smucker edit

In January 2013, a joint venture by Apollo Global Management and C. Dean Metropoulos and Company became the leading bidder to purchase Dolly Madison and the Hostess brand of snacks.[60] Silver Point Capital, Grupo Bimbo and Hurst Capital also placed bids for both brands.[57][58][61][72] On March 12, Apollo and Metropoulos won the bid to buy the brands from Hostess for $410 million.[73] The deal was approved by a bankruptcy court, and C. Dean Metropoulos and Company principal Daren Metropoulos announced that Hostess products would be sold again on July 15.[74]

This division eventually went public as the second incarnation of Hostess Brands, and announced it would be acquired by J.M. Smucker on September 11, 2023.[9]

Sold to Bimbo Bakeries USA edit

Bimbo Bakeries USA outbid Flowers Foods for the rights to Beefsteak on February 28, 2013,[75][76] and the deal was approved by a bankruptcy court on March 20.[77] In August, the trademarks of J. J. Nissen and the web domain jjnissenbreads.com were transferred to Bimbo Bakeries,[78] which later purchased other regional Hostess bread brands: Colombo, Cotton's, Emperor Norton, Fisherman's Wharf, Parisian and Toscana.

Sold to Flowers Foods edit

In January 2013 it was announced that Flowers Foods had offered to buy six of Hostess' bread brands, including Wonder Bread. The deal, initially structured at $360 million, involved 20 bakeries and 38 depots.[79] Flowers Foods won the bid to purchase five of the six bread brands (except Beefsteak, purchased by Grupo Bimbo) on February 28.[75] The deal went through a bankruptcy court in March and was completed on July 22, 2013.[80][81] The five brands are Butternut Bread, Home Pride, Merita Breads, Nature's Pride and Wonder Bread.[54]

Sold to Lewis Brothers Bakeries edit

The rights to the following Hostess brands were sold to Lewis Brothers Bakeries in December 2013:[82]

  • Blue Ribbon
  • Braun's
  • Bread du Jour
  • Continental
  • Countess
  • County Fair
  • D'Agostino's
  • Daffodil Farm
  • Di Carlo
  • Millbrook
  • Nancy Martin
  • Old World
  • Ozark Mill
  • Pantry Pride
  • Sap's
  • Weber's

Sold to McKee Foods edit

McKee Foods, owner of Hostess competitor Little Debbie, purchased the Drake's snack cakes on March 14, 2013 for $27.5 million.[66][83] After the deal passed a bankruptcy court, McKee began selling the snacks on September 23.[84]

Sold to United States Bakery edit

United States Bakery won the auction for four northwestern Hostess bakeries on March 15, 2013 for a reported $30.85 million,[65][85] and the deal was approved by a bankruptcy court that month. The brands were Eddy's, Grandma Emile's, Standish Farms and Sweetheart Bakery.[65] As of December 2015, the rights to the Baker's Inn and Dutch Hearth brands remain unsold.[86][87]

See also edit

References edit

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External links edit

  • Official websitere-established + current Hostess Brands entity.
  • Hostess Brands: closing information websiteletters and short FAQs on original Hostess Brands entity.

interstate, bakeries, this, article, about, company, known, hostess, brands, from, 2009, 2013, company, which, acquired, hostess, name, from, hostess, brands, known, hostess, brands, from, 2009, 2013, established, 1930, corporation, wholesale, baker, distribut. This article is about the company known as Hostess Brands from 2009 to 2013 For the company which acquired the Hostess name from Old HB see Hostess Brands Old HB Inc 2 known as Hostess Brands from 2009 to 2013 and established in 1930 as Interstate Bakeries Corporation was a wholesale baker and distributor of bakery products in the United States 3 Before its 2012 closure and liquidation it owned the Hostess Wonder Bread Nature s Pride Dolly Madison Butternut Breads and Drake s brands Old HB Inc Company typePrivateIndustryFood bakery Founded1930 94 years ago 1930 DefunctNovember 21 2012 11 years ago 2012 11 21 FateBankruptcySuccessorHostess BrandsHeadquartersIrving Texas United StatesKey peopleGregory F Rayburn CEOProductsBrands such as Wonder Bread US only Hostess Nature s Pride Merita Breads Home Pride and Dolly MadisonRevenue 2 8 billion 2008 1 Net income 144 million 2008 Total equity 462 million 2008 For many years the company was called Interstate Bakeries and based at 12 East Armour Boulevard Kansas City Missouri In 2009 after it emerged from a 2004 bankruptcy its name was changed to Hostess Brands and its headquarters moved to Irving Texas 4 Hostess Brands sought bankruptcy protection again in January 2012 5 On November 16 2012 the company filed a motion in United States Bankruptcy Court for the Southern District of New York in White Plains to close its business and sell its assets On November 21 the motion was accepted 6 and a judge agreed to sell the Hostess brands 7 8 The Hostess and Dolly Madison brands are now produced by Hostess Brands itself was acquired by The J M Smucker Company 9 Contents 1 History 1 1 Interstate Bakeries and Interstate Brands 1 2 DPF 1975 1 3 Interstate Bakeries and IBC Holdings 1 4 Continental Baking merger 1995 1 5 Bankruptcy 2004 1 6 Hostess Brands 2009 1 7 Bankruptcy and liquidation 1 8 Buyers 1 9 Hostess Brands 2 Brands 2 1 Sold to Apollo and Metropoulos later J M Smucker 2 2 Sold to Bimbo Bakeries USA 2 3 Sold to Flowers Foods 2 4 Sold to Lewis Brothers Bakeries 2 5 Sold to McKee Foods 2 6 Sold to United States Bakery 3 See also 4 References 5 External linksHistory edit nbsp Former headquarters on Armour Boulevard in Kansas City later the operations center nbsp Former Interstate Bakeries logo Interstate Bakeries and Interstate Brands edit The company has its roots in Nafziger Bakeries founded by Ralph Leroy Nafziger in a church basement at 6th and Prospect Avenue in Kansas City in 1905 Nafziger expanded the bakeries and bought out competitors In 1925 he sold Nafziger to Purity Bakeries 10 which became American Bakeries and acquired a controlling interest in Schulze Baking Company and its Butternut Breads brand 11 In 1930 Nafziger announced the formation of the Interstate Bakeries Corporation IBC with the merger of Schulze Bakery and the seven bakers of Western Bakeries of Los Angeles to become the fifth largest baker in the United States 12 13 The company sold Butternut bread wrapped in gingham to grocery stores 11 Schulze and Western continued to operate separately under the Interstate umbrella until 1937 when they merged with Interstate Bakeries 14 15 In 1943 Interstate acquired the Supreme Baking Company of Los Angeles and in 1950 it bought the O Rourke Baking Company of Buffalo New York nbsp Butter Nut bread package 1930 1945 Acquisitions during the 1950s and early 1960s included the Ambrosia Remar Butter Cream Campbell Sell and Schall Tasty baking companies the Kingston Cake and Cobb s Sunlit bakeries Sweetheart Bread Company and Hart s Bakeries 15 In the late 1960s IBC acquired Millbrook Bread Shawano Farms and the Baker and Shawano canning companies 15 In 1969 IBC changed its name to Interstate Brands with its signature brands Butternut and Blue Seal breads and Dolly Madison cakes Butternut Breads had been in business since 1902 15 DPF 1975 edit In 1975 Interstate was acquired by the Data Processing Financial and General Corporation DPF a computer leasing company that had encountered difficulties during the IBM antitrust battles which changed the pricing of IBM hardware To change its business model DPF used its cash to buy a low tech company The merged company headquartered in Hartsdale New York kept the DPF acronym while continuing to divest its remaining technology assets Investing heavily in its plants it acquired the Silver Loaf Baking Company Eddy Bakeries and Mrs Cubbison s Foods 15 Interstate Bakeries and IBC Holdings edit In 1981 DPF completed the sale of its remaining computer systems and changed the company name back to the original Interstate Bakeries moving its headquarters back to Kansas City 15 In 1986 Interstate acquired Purity Baking Company and Stewart Sandwiches followed in 1987 by Landshire Food Products 15 The following year Interstate became a privately held company and its name changed to IBC Holdings IBC bought the Merita Cotton s Bakeries division of the American Bakeries Company 15 In 1991 IBC again became a public company and changed its name back to Interstate Bakeries 15 nbsp Interstate Bakeries Hostess delivery truck Continental Baking merger 1995 edit In January 1995 Interstate acquired the Continental Baking Company from Ralston Purina for 330 million and 16 9 million shares of Interstate stock Continental had acquired Taggart Bakeries of Indianapolis in 1925 16 and the deal brought Taggart s creations including Wonder Bread and the Hostess brand to Interstate Taggart had created Hostess in 1921 and the brand focused on cakes like Twinkies CupCakes Ding Dongs and Ho Hos created during Continental s ownership 17 At this time the merged company also bought the San Francisco French Bread Company John J Nissen Baking Company Drake s and My Bread Company 15 With the merger Interstate held two national bread divisions Butternut and Wonder Bread The divisions had different cultures Butternut was unregimented with each bakery a self contained profit center and Wonder Bread was structured this caused early problems In both divisions snack cakes were more profitable due to economy of scale and logistics When extended shelf life enzymes were developed for bread it was hoped to convert small less efficient bakeries into a network of large bakeries like their snack cakes operations The new enzymes gave the bread a different taste and texture 18 and market forces reduced prices and sales Bankruptcy 2004 edit On September 22 2004 Interstate Bakeries filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy 19 The company named a new chief executive Tony Alvarez Interstate Bakery s stock which had been 34 per share fell to 2 05 with the bankruptcy During the bankruptcy proceedings at the time the longest running in U S history Interstate fought a 2007 bid from Mexican baker Grupo Bimbo and Ron Burkle of the Yucaipa Companies 20 Under Craig Jung Interstate Bakeries emerged from bankruptcy as a private company on February 3 2009 21 The plan included a 50 percent equity stake by Ripplewood Holdings and credit lines from General Electric Capital and GE Capital Markets Silver Point Finance and Monarch Master Funding Interstate s unionized workers made contract concessions in exchange for equity in the company 22 During the 2004 2009 bankruptcy period Interstate closed nine of its 54 bakeries and more than 300 outlet stores and its workforce declined from 32 000 to 22 000 The company dropped regional brands and operating agreements such as an agreement to produce Sunbeam Bread for the northeastern U S 22 Hostess Brands 2009 edit On November 2 2009 IBC became Hostess Brands named for its Twinkies and cupcakes cake division Hostess Brands continued its bread lines including Wonder Bread 23 The company s subsidiaries such as Interstate Brands Corporation and IBC Sales Corporation continued displaying their name and logo on Hostess Brands products Bankruptcy and liquidation edit In December 2011 it was reported that Hostess Brands was on the verge of filing for bankruptcy a second time The company stopped paying future pension benefits after August breaking its union contracts 24 According to a Hostess employee We understand that should we pursue some form of legal action to require the company to live up to the terms of the contract they may close but we have come to believe that they will close anyway We believe the company is poorly managed and the only hope is a complete change in management 24 On January 10 2012 Hostess Brands filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy for the second time In its filing the company said it is not competitive primarily due to legacy pension and medical benefit obligations and restrictive work rules According to Hostess it employed 19 000 people and was more than 860 million in debt The company said it would continue to operate with 75 million of debtor in possession financing from Monarch Alternative Capital Silver Point Capital and other investors 5 In March Brian Driscoll resigned as CEO 25 and was replaced by Gregory F Rayburn who had been hired as chief restructuring officer nine days earlier Fortune reported that unions in the company were unhappy with Driscoll s proposed compensation package of 1 5 million plus cash incentives and 1 95 million in long term compensation The court had discovered that Hostess executives received raises of up to 80 percent the previous year Rayburn cut the salaries of the four top Hostess executives to 1 to be restored by January 1 of the following year or earlier 26 In July 2012 the New York Post reported that negotiations with the Teamsters Union led by Silver Point Capital were close to an agreement allowing Hostess Brands to cut employee pay and benefits if the company continued funding its pension plans 27 In May as required by the Worker Adjustment and Retraining Notification Act the company s 19 000 workers were warned of a possible layoff In an email to the Marysville California Appeal Democrat Hostess spokesman Erik Halvorson wrote that the May notices were to alert employees to a possible sale of the company but our goal is still to emerge from bankruptcy as a growing company with a strong future 28 Although the layoff notices listed July 7 21 as dates on July 5 another company spokesman told the Financial News amp Daily Record that there were no immediate plans to lay off Hostess employees 29 In November 2012 Hostess employees nationwide went on strike The Bakery Confectionery Tobacco Workers and Grain Millers International Union BCTGM representing 6 600 Hostess employees took action after a contract proposal from Hostess Brands was rejected by 92 percent of its members 30 On November 16 Hostess announced that it was ceasing its plant operations and laying off most of its 18 500 employees The company said that it intended to sell off its assets including its well known brand names and liquidate 31 32 According to CEO Gregory Rayburn Hostess Brands will move promptly to lay off most of its 18 500 member workforce and focus on selling its assets to the highest bidders 33 34 A BCTGM press release issued that day read in part When a highly respected financial consultant hired by Hostess determined earlier this year that the company s business plan to exit bankruptcy was guaranteed to fail because it left the company with unsustainable debt levels our members knew that the massive wage and benefit concessions the company was demanding would go straight to Wall Street investors and not back into the company 35 According to Rayburn potential buyers expressed interest in acquiring the Hostess brand 36 On November 21 Judge Robert Drain cleared Hostess to close 6 In approving the plan Drain ruled against U S Trustee for the Southern District Tracy Hope Davis motion to convert the bankruptcy to a Chapter 7 bankruptcy with an appointed trustee to oversee liquidation Davis criticized the plan s provisions which would grant bonuses to insiders and cherry pick which administrative claims get paid 37 Drain left Rayburn in charge of the liquidation Hostess had argued that its assets would devalue if the company had to wait for a trustee to get up to speed on the company 38 Hostess Brands liquidation plan was finalized by a federal bankruptcy judge on November 29 39 In January 2013 the company asked a judge to set a March 21 deadline for workers to file back pay claims 40 On February 11 a U S Bankruptcy Court judge in New York approved stalking horse bidders for Hostess Brands 41 42 43 44 The company received bids for assets from Walmart Target Kroger Flowers Foods and Grupo Bimbo 45 46 47 48 and was expected to sell its snack cake and bread brands during 2013 49 50 51 52 On January 8 2013 Hostess Brands hired Hilco to sell its equipment machinery and real estate 53 Three days later the company announced a 390 million stalking horse bid by Flowers Foods for six of its bread brands including Wonder Bread 54 and court approval was received for a February 28 auction of the brands 55 On January 15 2013 Hostess Brands began searching for a stalking horse bidder for its snack cakes 56 four companies Grupo Bimbo a partnership of Apollo Global Management and C Dean Metropoulos and Company Hurst Capital and McKee Foods were negotiating 57 58 59 Two weeks later the company picked Apollo Global Management and C Dean Metropoulos and Company as lead bidder for its snack cakes 60 61 62 63 with the bid deadlines for all Hostess brands March 11 and 12 64 Buyers edit It was announced on January 28 2013 that United States Bakery was the leading bidder for Hostess Sweetheart Eddy s Standish Farms and Grandma Emilie s brands and McKee Foods was the leading bidder for its Drake s brand which included Ring Dings Yodels and Drake s Devil Dogs 65 66 On March 11 Apollo Global Management made the sole bid 410 million for the company s snack business which included Twinkies this company later went public under the name Hostess Brands and trade on the New York Stock Exchange under ticker TWNK 67 On 11 September 2023 The J M Smucker Company announced it would buy Hostess for 5 6 billion in a cash and stock deal Hostess Brands edit Further information Hostess Brands On June 6 2013 the new Hostess Brands reopened the Emporia Kansas plant 68 Hostess announced ten days later that production would resume the following month and on June 23 said that its brands would be back on store shelves on July 15 69 70 although the company would sell fewer products than before new president Rich Seban said that it might produce innovative pastries and snacks We can have some fun with that mixture Seban said suggesting that Hostess might experiment with gluten free higher fiber and lower sugar and sodium products 71 Brands editSold to Apollo and Metropoulos later J M Smucker edit In January 2013 a joint venture by Apollo Global Management and C Dean Metropoulos and Company became the leading bidder to purchase Dolly Madison and the Hostess brand of snacks 60 Silver Point Capital Grupo Bimbo and Hurst Capital also placed bids for both brands 57 58 61 72 On March 12 Apollo and Metropoulos won the bid to buy the brands from Hostess for 410 million 73 The deal was approved by a bankruptcy court and C Dean Metropoulos and Company principal Daren Metropoulos announced that Hostess products would be sold again on July 15 74 This division eventually went public as the second incarnation of Hostess Brands and announced it would be acquired by J M Smucker on September 11 2023 9 Sold to Bimbo Bakeries USA edit Bimbo Bakeries USA outbid Flowers Foods for the rights to Beefsteak on February 28 2013 75 76 and the deal was approved by a bankruptcy court on March 20 77 In August the trademarks of J J Nissen and the web domain jjnissenbreads com were transferred to Bimbo Bakeries 78 which later purchased other regional Hostess bread brands Colombo Cotton s Emperor Norton Fisherman s Wharf Parisian and Toscana Sold to Flowers Foods edit In January 2013 it was announced that Flowers Foods had offered to buy six of Hostess bread brands including Wonder Bread The deal initially structured at 360 million involved 20 bakeries and 38 depots 79 Flowers Foods won the bid to purchase five of the six bread brands except Beefsteak purchased by Grupo Bimbo on February 28 75 The deal went through a bankruptcy court in March and was completed on July 22 2013 80 81 The five brands are Butternut Bread Home Pride Merita Breads Nature s Pride and Wonder Bread 54 Sold to Lewis Brothers Bakeries edit The rights to the following Hostess brands were sold to Lewis Brothers Bakeries in December 2013 82 Blue Ribbon Braun s Bread du Jour Continental Countess County Fair D Agostino s Daffodil Farm Di Carlo Millbrook Nancy Martin Old World Ozark Mill Pantry Pride Sap s Weber s Sold to McKee Foods edit McKee Foods owner of Hostess competitor Little Debbie purchased the Drake s snack cakes on March 14 2013 for 27 5 million 66 83 After the deal passed a bankruptcy court McKee began selling the snacks on September 23 84 Sold to United States Bakery edit United States Bakery won the auction for four northwestern Hostess bakeries on March 15 2013 for a reported 30 85 million 65 85 and the deal was approved by a bankruptcy court that month The brands were Eddy s Grandma Emile s Standish Farms and Sweetheart Bakery 65 As of December 2015 update the rights to the Baker s Inn and Dutch Hearth brands remain unsold 86 87 See also editVachon Inc and George Weston Limited holders of rights to select Hostess brand items in Canada Portals nbsp Companies nbsp FoodReferences edit Stock market quotes news currency conversions amp more Google Finance Retrieved January 11 2012 Old HB Inc f k a Hostess Brands Inc Case Number 12 22052 KCCLLC net Retrieved October 17 2016 Hostess Brands is Closed Hostess Brands November 16 2012 Archived from the original on November 16 2012 IBC moving headquarters to Dallas Kansas City Star February 17 2009 a b Palank Jacqueline January 12 2012 Twinkies Maker Hostess Files for Chapter 11 Protection The Wall Street Journal Retrieved January 11 2012 a b Isidore Chris O Toole James November 21 2012 Hostess closing OK d by judge CNN Money Retrieved November 21 2012 Hostess Wins Approval for 800 Million in Cake Bread Sales Fox Business March 19 2013 Retrieved March 19 2013 McCarty Dawn March 19 2013 Hostess Judge Approves Asset Sales of Over 800 Million Business Week Archived from the original on April 10 2013 Retrieved March 19 2013 a b Sen Anirban Roumeliotis Greg Rajesh Ananya Mariam Sen Anirban Rajesh Ananya Mariam September 11 2023 J M Smucker to buy Twinkies maker Hostess Brands in 5 6 billion deal Reuters Retrieved September 13 2023 Combination in the American Bread Baking Industry With Some Observations on Combination in the American Bread Baking Industry Google Books Stanford University Press December 1 1924 ISBN 9780804703345 Retrieved November 23 2012 a b Hogan Greg Twinkies Wrapped in Pantyhose Hostess Archived from the original on November 18 2012 Retrieved November 17 2012 Displaying Abstract June 10 2012 TO OFFER 23 141 SHARES Interstate Bakeries to Market Issue of Preferred at 96 New York Times Retrieved November 23 2012 Reading Eagle March 31 1930 Displaying Abstract June 10 2012 BAKERY MERGER NEARS Plans to Consolidate Interstate and Schulze Concerns Made Article New York Times New York Times Retrieved November 23 2012 a b c d e f g h i j International Directory of Company Histories Vol 38 St James Press 2001 via fundingverse com Ament Phil Wonder Bread History Invention of Wonder Bread Ideafinder com Archived from the original on October 26 2012 Retrieved November 16 2012 Continental Baking Co Lehman Brothers Collection Library hbs edu March 1 1980 Retrieved November 16 2012 Adamy Janet September 23 2004 Half a Loaf At Giant Baker Freshness Project Takes Sour Turn Mindfully org Archived from the original on November 27 2012 Retrieved January 19 2013 Interstate Bakeries revenue falls www bizjournals com Retrieved April 23 2020 Gara Antoine September 12 2012 Union to Lose Big in Hostess Bankruptcy Update 1 TheStreet Retrieved November 16 2012 Interstate Bakeries emerges from bankruptcy Business Courier of Cincinnati February 4 2009 a b Interstate Bakeries post bankruptcy funding appears in trouble Kansas City Star January 8 2009 IBC to Change Name to Hostess Brands Inc Reuters November 2 2009 Archived from the original on November 18 2009 Retrieved January 11 2012 a b Hostess Brands Bankruptcy Eyed New York Post December 22 2011 Kosman Josh May 9 2012 Hostess CEO resigns fueling speculation of baker s liquidation New York Post Retrieved November 15 2012 Kaplan David July 26 2012 Hostess is bankrupt again Fortune Archived from the original on November 16 2012 Retrieved November 15 2012 Kosman Josh July 2 2012 Skinny on cake talks New York Post Retrieved July 7 2012 Cuts for Hostess workers Gebb Ashley July 4 2012 Thirteen jobs at risk at Yuba City Hostess outlet Appeal Democrat Marysville California Archived from the original on January 17 2013 Retrieved July 7 2012 We are simply fulfilling our requirements by sending these notices Mathis Karen July 6 2012 Hostess No immediate plans for employee layoffs Financial News amp Daily Record Retrieved July 7 2012 The goal is to restructure Hostess and come out of Chapter 11 as a stronger company Benson Lisa November 10 2012 Hostess Brand workers hit the picket lines KSHB TV Archived from the original on November 14 2012 Retrieved November 10 2012 Hostess Brands closing for good CNN Business November 16 2012 Retrieved November 16 2012 Twinkie Maker Hostess to Close The Wall Street Journal November 16 2012 Retrieved November 16 2012 Milford Phil McCarty Dawn Rochelle Bill November 16 2012 Twinkie Maker Hostess to Shut Down After Strike Bloomberg Retrieved November 16 2012 Hostess Brands Liquidation Twinkie Maker Seeks Court Permission To Liquidate Huffington Post November 16 2012 Retrieved November 16 2012 HOSTESS DEMISE A DECADE IN THE MAKING pdf BCTGM International Union Retrieved 19 November 2012 Twinkies May Find Buyer Hostess CEO Says ABC News November 19 2012 Retrieved November 20 2012 Hoffman Constantine November 20 2012 Hope for Twinkies as Hostess union go to mediation CBS Moneywatch Retrieved November 26 2012 McCarty Dawn November 26 2012 Hostess begins firings as competitors eye brands Standard Examiner Archived from the original on November 29 2012 Retrieved November 26 2012 O Toole James November 30 2012 Judge OK s Bonuses for Execs in Hostess Liquidation Chicago Defender Archived from the original on December 6 2012 Retrieved November 30 2012 Milford Phil January 24 2013 Hostess Asks Judge to Approve March 21 Claims Deadline Bloomberg Retrieved January 24 2013 Murray Lance February 11 2013 Court approves lead bids for Hostess Brands Dallas Business Journal Retrieved February 11 2013 Hostess Gets Court OK to Auction Twinkies Drake s Brands Convenience Store News February 11 2013 Archived from the original on February 15 2013 Retrieved February 11 2013 Freeburn Christopher February 12 2013 Hostess Gets OK to Auction Off Brands Investor Place Archived from the original on April 11 2013 Retrieved February 12 2013 Hostess Brands gets approval to sell assets KSNT February 12 2013 Retrieved February 12 2013 permanent dead link Hostess bidders include Wal Mart Kroger Newsday December 13 2012 Archived from the original on March 24 2013 Retrieved December 14 2012 Berr Jonathan December 14 2012 Wal Mart wants to save the Twinkie MSN Money Archived from the original on December 18 2012 Retrieved December 14 2012 McCracken Jeffrey Jinks Beth December 13 2012 Hostess Said to Attract Bids From Wal Mart Kroger Bloomberg Retrieved December 14 2012 Bidders line up for Hostess UPI January 6 2013 Retrieved January 6 2013 Sutyak Kara December 22 2012 Twinkie Time Snack Favorites Could Soon Return Fox 8 Cleveland Retrieved December 23 2012 Choi Candace December 22 2012 Hostess brands to be shared Philly com Retrieved December 23 2012 Choi Candice January 2 2013 Hostess expects to split up snack cakes in sale Vending Market Watch Retrieved January 2 2013 permanent dead link Askew Katy January 3 2013 US Hostess sale will most likely lead to break up Just Food Archived from the original on January 29 2013 Retrieved January 4 2012 Yerak Becky January 8 2013 Northbrook firm to handle Hostess real estate equipment sale Chicago Tribune Retrieved January 8 2013 a b Choi Candice January 11 2013 Hostess To Sell Wonder Bread Other Bread Business To Flower Foods For 390 Million The Huffington Post Retrieved January 12 2013 McCarty Dawn January 25 2013 Hostess Receives Court Approval to Hold Feb 28 Asset Auction Bloomberg Retrieved January 25 2013 Mason Jamie January 15 2013 Hostess turns auction attention to cake business The Deal Archived from the original on January 17 2013 Retrieved January 15 2013 a b Robinson Jacobs Karen January 17 2013 Bimbo Apollo in the hunt for Twinkies report Dallas News Archived from the original on January 21 2013 Retrieved January 17 2013 a b Who Will Take the Cakes CSP Daily News January 22 2013 Archived from the original on January 26 2013 Retrieved January 22 2013 Report McKee Foods seeking Hostess Drake s brand Yahoo Finance January 26 2013 Retrieved January 26 2013 a b Jinks Beth Alesci Cristina January 29 2013 Hostess Said to Pick Apollo Metropoulos as Lead Cake Bid Bloomberg Business Week Archived from the original on February 15 2013 Retrieved January 29 2013 a b Twinkies bidders Apollo Metropoulos submit 410M offer Chicago Tribune January 31 2013 Retrieved March 1 2013 Trader Midnight January 31 2013 Apollo Global Management Confirms Purchase of Certain Hostess Assets Shares Up 4 5 Hit New 52 Week Highs Nasdaq Retrieved January 31 2013 Amato Michael February 26 2013 Apollo seeks 450 million loan for Hostess snack cake unit Tulsa World Retrieved February 26 2013 Schroder Eric March 8 2013 Bid deadlines for Hostess businesses set for next week Baking Business Retrieved March 8 2013 a b c Hostess chooses United States Bakery for some Northwest assets Food Business News January 29 2013 Retrieved March 1 2013 a b Hostess picks Little Debbie maker for Drake s Toledo Blade January 28 2013 Retrieved March 1 2013 Kosman Josh March 12 2013 Leon Black s Apollo Global new owner of Twinkies other Hostess snack brands New York Post Retrieved March 12 2013 Fitch Ben June 7 2013 Hostess cuts ribbon on flagship bakery Emporia Gazette Retrieved June 19 2013 Adams Tony June 16 2013 New Hostess owner set to resume snack cake production at Dolly Madison plant in Columbus The Ledger Enquirer Retrieved June 19 2013 Choi Candice June 23 2013 Hostess Twinkies to return to shelves July 15 Yahoo News Retrieved June 23 2013 June Daniel Twinkies Return as Hostess Rises from the Ashes Russell Michelle March 11 2013 US Silver Point Hurst interested in Hostess snack cake unit Just Food Archived from the original on March 15 2013 Retrieved March 11 2013 de la Merced Michael March 12 2013 Hostess Picks Apollo Led Group as New Owner of Twinkies The New York Times Retrieved March 12 2013 Twinkies To Return To Shelves July 15 Hostess Says AP via Huffington Post June 23 2013 Retrieved June 24 2013 a b Robinson Jacobs Karen February 28 2013 Hostess picks Flowers Bimbo as bread buyers Dallas News Archived from the original on March 3 2013 Retrieved February 28 2013 Bimbo wins Beefsteak bread in Hostess Brands auction Reuters February 28 2013 Retrieved February 28 2013 Gelski Jeff March 20 2013 Hostess confirms court approval of largest sales Baking Business Retrieved June 24 2013 Bimbo Bakeries USA January 24 2014 Archived from the original on January 7 2004 Retrieved January 24 2014 Askew Katy January 14 2013 Flowers stalking horse for Hostess bread brands Just Food Archived from the original on January 19 2013 Retrieved January 15 2013 Isidore Chris February 28 2013 Flowers Foods buys Wonder Bread from Hostess CNN Money Retrieved February 28 2013 Flowers Foods completes acquisition of Hostess bakeries USPTO Assignments on the Web McKee wins Drake s cakes from Hostess for 27M Chicago Tribune March 14 2013 Retrieved March 14 2013 Drake s Cakes Makes Comeback Today FoodWorldNews September 23 2013 Retrieved September 25 2013 McCarty Dawn Jinks Beth March 15 2013 United States Bakery Said to Win Bid for Hostess Breads Bloomberg Retrieved March 16 2013 IBC marketing chief is eager to revitalize iconic brands Kansas City Business Journal January 1 2006 Retrieved March 14 2015 Dutch Hearth Bakery LLC Open Corporates July 31 2013 Retrieved March 14 2015 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Hostess Brands Official website re established current Hostess Brands entity Hostess Brands closing information website letters and short FAQs on original Hostess Brands entity Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Interstate Bakeries amp oldid 1184371377, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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