Party City set to exit bankruptcy with $1 billion debt reduction

Reuters

Published Sep 06, 2023 03:59PM ET

Updated Sep 06, 2023 04:41PM ET

By Dietrich Knauth

(Reuters) -A U.S. bankruptcy judge on Wednesday approved Party City Holdco (OTC:PRTYQ)'s Chapter 11 bankruptcy plan, which will cancel about $1 billion in company debt and turn all of its equity value over to the retailer's lenders.

Party City attorney Ken Ziman said at a court hearing in Houston that the party supplies retailer will emerge from bankruptcy as a stronger business, closing just a "handful" of its approximately 800 stores and preserving thousands of jobs.

U.S. Bankruptcy Judge David Jones signed off on the restructuring deal while acknowledging the poor outcome for individual shareholders whose shares will be wiped out. Party City simply could not repay all of its $1.4 billion in pre-bankruptcy debt and have money left over for shareholders, according to the judge.

"The math is what the math is," Jones told a shareholder who spoke up at the hearing. "It's one of those things where there simply is not an alternative."

Party City is estimated to be worth between $450 million and $750 million, the company's financial adviser Moelis (NYSE:MC) & Co said in an Aug. 31 court filing.

The retailer filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy in January, citing high inflation, lingering impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic, and difficulties sourcing helium for its party balloons.