- The company is the third largest less-than-truckload carrier
- Gets breathing room from creditors as it ponders repayment
The carrier will sell its warehouses and trucks in order to repay a pandemic-era, government loan of $737 million and another $485 million in debt it owes private lenders, according to court papers
The company’s shares are already reversing some of last week’s gains, plunging as much as 40% as of 11:07 a.m. New York time Monday.
“It is with profound disappointment that Yellow announces that it is closing after nearly 100 years in business,” Yellow Chief Executive Officer
The shutdown will leave Yellow’s roughly 30,000 employees jobless, according to a statement. The company has already fired at least 3,500 people, court papers show. Yellow and the American Trucking Associations are launching a jobs database to help employees find work, the company said.
The company also expects to obtain some fresh cash to fund its wind-down and pay certain wages accrued prior to the bankruptcy. Yellow will keep about 1,650 workers to help it shut down and sell its assets, the company said.
The Nashville-based Yellow blamed its collapse on union officials, claiming that the International Brotherhood of Teamsters, one of the most powerful labor groups in the US, refused to help management revitalize the long-struggling business. It had previously traded barbs with Teamsters, saying the union had gummed up plans to reshape its trucking divisions.
Funding During Bankruptcy
During the pandemic, Yellow received a $737 million loan from the Trump administration to keep the company afloat. The debt made up 95% of what was
Yellow claims that it may be able to fully repay that taxpayer loan and its other secured debt if it gets enough cash from selling its assets.
To fund its wind-down, the company plans to borrow as much as $142.5 million and to refinance another $501 million in older debt, according to court papers. That money is being provided by Yellow’s current lenders, who were the only investors willing to give the company more money.
Investing giant Apollo Global Management is among the company’s biggest private lenders and was involved in putting together the new loan package,
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Earlier, the company had
Yellow is the third-largest less-than-truckload carrier, meaning it accepts shipments that don’t fill a whole trailer. The company has been struggling financially as it stares down more than $1 billion of debt that matures in 2024.
Bankruptcies tend to bite less-than-truckload carriers hard because shippers often divert their loads to competitors, weakening already-struggling companies in a manner similar to bank runs, Bloomberg Intelligence’s
Yellow has faced years of financial stress. The company
The case is Yellow Corp.
(Updates throughout with details from court papers.)
--With assistance from
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Rheaa Rao, Andrew Monahan
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