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Reader’s Digest Is Bankrupt as Iconic Magazine Falters

lifeafter41

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By Dawn McCarty - Feb 18, 2013 1:21 PM
Print QUEUEQ..RDA Holding Co., publisher of the 91-year-old Reader’s Digest magazine, filed for bankruptcy to cut $465 million in debt and focus on North American operations as consumers shift from print to electronic media.

The company is the latest in a line of iconic businesses to have recently sought court protection from creditors, after Hostess Brands Inc., maker of Twinkies and Wonder Bread, and Eastman Kodak Co., inventor of Kodachrome and the Instamatic camera.

Reader’s Digest Files Bankruptcy to Cut $465 Million in Debt Justin Sullivan/Getty Images

Reader’s Digest, founded by DeWitt and Lila Wallace, went public in 1990. An investor group led by private-equity firm Ripplewood Holdings LLC bought it in 2007 for $1.6 billion and the assumption of about $800 million in debt. The company also filed for bankruptcy in August 2009, citing a drop in advertising spending and the debt load incurred in its acquisition.

The company listed assets and debt of more than $1 billion each in Chapter 11 documents filed yesterday in U.S. Bankruptcy Court in White Plains, New York. Under a restructuring agreement supported by Wells Fargo & Co., $465 million of remaining senior notes will all convert to equity. The company expects to have about $100 million in debt when it exits Chapter 11, about an 80 percent reduction.

Unsecured Creditors
Among the company’s largest unsecured creditors listed in court papers were Luxor Capital Group of New York, listed as administrative agent for a $10 million loan, and the U.S. Federal Trade Commission, with an $8 million claim.

“We have had an ongoing process to simplify and rationalize our international business by licensing our local markets to third parties, to other publishers, to other investors and that has been a big part of our effort to streamline the company and bring in proceeds to bring down debt,” Robert Guth, Reader’s Digest’s chief executive officer, said yesterday in an interview.

The company’s flagship print magazine is read by more than 25 million people, according to its website. The company publishes 75 magazines globally including 49 editions of Reader’s Digest, Taste of Home, the Family Handyman and Birds & Blooms. Reader’s Digest “sold more digital editions in December than we did newsstand editions,” Guth said.

Meredith Sale
The company had some success in the sale of Allrecipes.com “but frankly haven’t had enough success on that front,” Guth said. Last year Reader’s Digest sold Allrecipes and Every Day with Rachel Ray to Meredith Corp. for $175 million.

“The key message here is that we have a lot of confidence in the future of the business based upon the success of the ongoing operational transformation, but we haven’t had as much success with the balance sheet side of it and we need this process to help accelerate that,” Guth said.

“The much more modest debt level puts us in a position to continue to really execute these plans and push these brands forward well into the future, so it’s a very good new lease on life,” he said.

The company said it reached a pre-petition accord with its secured lender and more than 70 percent of its secured note holders. The bankruptcy was filed to implement the pre-arranged restructuring.

“The Chapter 11 process, which will facilitate a significant debt reduction, will enable us to continue to redefine our business by focusing our resources on our strong North American publishing brands, which have shown a new vitality as a result of our transformation efforts, particularly in the digital arena,” Guth said in a company statement.

Hostess
Hostess, previously known as Interstate Bakeries Corp., left an earlier bankruptcy in 2009 under the control of Ripplewood and lenders. The company, based in Irving, Texas, entered bankruptcy again in January 2012 after changes in American diets curbed sales as ingredient costs and labor expenses climbed.

Kodak, based in Rochester, New York, filed for bankruptcy in January 2012, and CEO Antonio Perez has been selling businesses to shrink the company and fund its shift into commercial printing and packaging.

RDA’s international operations, including Canada, are not part of the filing.

The case is In RDA Holding Co. Inc., 13-22233, U.S. Bankruptcy Court, Southern District of New York (White Plains). The previous bankruptcy case is In Re Reader’s Digest Association Inc., 09-23529, U.S. Bankruptcy Court, Southern District of New York (White Plains).
 
end of an era so to speak. my mom has been subsrbing and reading for the last 30= 40 years
 
Isn't this the magazine the Nigerians got their con ideas from?
 
and it makes people wonder where they got their cash prizes for their Sweepstakes from... :eek::eek::eek:
 
and it makes people wonder where they got their cash prizes for their Sweepstakes from... :eek::eek::eek:

$465 million in debt..............................................

In any case, they will usually tell you that "Congratulations! You're the winner of our grandprize!............... if you win our sweepstakes."
 
$465 million in debt..............................................

In any case, they will usually tell you that "Congratulations! You're the winner of our grandprize!............... if you win our sweepstakes."

I wonder how they ended up with such huge debts. But I remember that the magazine did not have any advertisements in it. Is that the reason? I doubt they can survive just by money from the sales of magazine.
 
end of an era so to speak. my mom has been subsrbing and reading for the last 30= 40 years

My subscription started in 1965......... *sigh* Wonder where I can read "Laughter the Best Medicine" from now on.
 
I wonder how they ended up with such huge debts. But I remember that the magazine did not have any advertisements in it. Is that the reason? I doubt they can survive just by money from the sales of magazine.

I recall vaguely that they had adverts, but most of their available non-article space would be for the sweepstakes or for subscriptions.

Have to say though that their articles and regular items like "Laughter the best medicine" and "All in a day's work" etc were pretty good.
 
My subscription started in 1965......... *sigh* Wonder where I can read "Laughter the Best Medicine" from now on.

try the States Times, it's full of jokes.
 
$465 million in debt..............................................

In any case, they will usually tell you that "Congratulations! You're the winner of our grandprize!............... if you win our sweepstakes."

bro,
did they tell you that you're the proud winner of a quarter of a million dollars in their Christmas draw during last December? :p:p:p
 
Have to say though that their articles and regular items like "Laughter the best medicine" and "All in a day's work" etc were pretty good.

could we say that the win-a-car gimmick cost them a fair bit due to rising COE prices? :eek::eek::eek:
 
bro,
did they tell you that you're the proud winner of a quarter of a million dollars in their Christmas draw during last December? :p:p:p

didn't subscribe or buy or even read it for very long already.

It did have good articles, jokes, feel-good or funny stories and anecdotes though.
 
It did have good articles, jokes, feel-good or funny stories and anecdotes though.

still amazed at how they managed to trace my address after me shifted out of the old place in the past.
 
try the States Times, it's full of jokes.

Surgeon General's Warning: Exposure to Straits Times jokes even for limited periods of time can cause irreversible brain damage. Prolonged exposure could like to fatal injuries. Please consult your physician before using Straits Times. It is ranked 149 in the world in terms content safety.
 
end of an era so to speak. my mom has been subsrbing and reading for the last 30= 40 years

I have 20 plus years of Reader's Digest, neatly stacked in my old house storeroom, together with other magazines like Time, Newsweek etc., including my collection of Asia Magazine the Sunday supplement of the Sunday Times...There was no more space...I have to dump the whole lot to the garang guni man... years ago!

):-

I just love the RD., especially the short jokes, like "laughter the best medicine" & the articles..
 
Surgeon General's Warning: Exposure to Straits Times jokes even for limited periods of time can cause irreversible brain damage. Prolonged exposure could like to fatal injuries. Please consult your physician before using Straits Times. It is ranked 149 in the world in terms content safety.

In some case, convulsions & hallucinations may occur & these cannot be cured.
 
with the internet, they never thought of going for online subscription?

That is bad business ..
 
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