Car rental company Hertz files for bankruptcy protection
Hertz filed for bankruptcy protection Friday, unable to
withstand the coronavirus pandemic that has crippled global travel and with it,
the heavily indebted 102-year-old car rental company's business.
The Estero, Florida-based company's lenders were unwilling
to grant it another extension on its auto lease debt payments past a Friday
deadline, triggering the filing in U.S. Bankruptcy Court in Delaware.
Hertz and its subsidiaries will continue to operate,
according to a release from the company. Hertz's principal international
operating regions and franchised locations are not included in the filing, the
statement said.
By the end of March, Hertz Global Holdings Inc. had racked
up more than $24 billion in debt, according to the bankruptcy filing, with only
$1 billion of available cash.
Starting in mid-March, the company – whose car-rental bands
also include Dollar and Thrifty – lost all revenue when travel shut down due to
the coronavirus. The company made "significant efforts" but couldn't
raise money on the capital markets, so it started missing payments to creditors
in April, the filing said. Hertz has also been plagued by management upheaval,
naming its fourth CEO in six years on May 18.
"No business is built for zero revenue," former
CEO Kathryn Marinello said on the company's first-quarter earnings conference
call May 12. "There's only so long that companies' reserves will carry
them."
In late March, Hertz shed 12,000 workers and put another
4,000 on furlough, cut vehicle acquisitions by 90% and stopped all nonessential
spending. The company said the moves would save $2.5 billion per year.
But the cuts came too late to save Hertz, the nation's No. 2
auto rental company founded in 1918 by Walter L. Jacobs, who started in Chicago
with a fleet of a dozen Ford Model Ts. Jacobs sold the company, initially
called Rent-A-Car Inc., to John D. Hertz in 1923.
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