Phoenix Services Topco LLC, an international service provider to steel producers, filed for chapter 11 bankruptcy in an attempt to renegotiate customer contracts it says have become unprofitable due to recent economic pressures, Bloomberg Law reported. The Radnor, Pa.-based company, which employs 2,600 people around the globe, sought chapter 11 protection yesterday in the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the District of Delaware with an agreement to borrow $50 million in new financing from its existing lenders and refinance $150 million in pre-bankruptcy debt. Phoenix is controlled by an affiliate of Apollo Global Management Inc. following a 2017 acquisition. Phoenix specializes in removing and handling molten slag that has been separated from steel. The company, which operates at 39 customer sites, also prepares and transports metal scraps, raw materials, and finished products. It entered bankruptcy with $587 million in funded debt. Phoenix’s contract portfolio has recently become “unsustainable” due to “inflationary pressures and rising fuel costs, coupled with suboptimal contract terms,” the company said in court papers. Phoenix has also encountered operational challenges at customer sites, including equipment failures and management turnover, it said. “The contracts and operational challenges, in turn, have placed a significant strain on the debtors’ liquidity, which was further weakened by capital lease payments, rising interest rates, and increased capital expenditures,” the company said. The company has developed a strategy to renegotiate or terminate unprofitable contracts and emerge from bankruptcy in March 2023 “as a going concern with a sustainable and profitable contract portfolio,” it said.
