Saturday, February 7, 2026

The Bloom Is Off the Rose – January 2026 M&A Activity


Label Converters Enter a More Sober Phase

For much of the past decade and a half, discussions about mergers and acquisitions in the printing and packaging industries have been dominated by the steady drumbeat of label-printing deals, as often reported here in The Target Report. (See The Target Report: Duking it Out in the Label Business – February 2023). However, over the past several months, transactional activity in the label segment has slowed, and there have been rumblings that the overall label printing and converting businesses face increasing headwinds.

Those rumblings turned unmistakably loud on January 29th, when Multi-Color Corporation (“MCC”) filed for Chapter 11 protection under a prepackaged restructuring plan designed to slash its debt load, eliminate existing equity, and fundamentally reset its capital structure. Supported in advance (hence the “prepack”) by the majority of its senior lenders and its private equity sponsor, CD&R, the filing allows MCC to continue operating without disruption.

MCC’s importance to the industry and the impact of the bankruptcy filing cannot be overstated. As of the bankruptcy filing, the company operated in 25 countries, with over 90 facilities, of which 39 are in North America. The company employs 12,800 people worldwide, with 4,870 of those working here in the US. The parent company has 85 wholly owned subsidiaries and 56 related debtor entities that filed for bankruptcy concurrently with MCC.

The MCC bankruptcy filing is the clearest signal yet that the consolidation in the label printing and converting sector has entered a more mature, and far less forgiving, phase. For many in the label business, including other PE-backed label platform companies, a top contender in the contest for a high-multiple exit from ownership has been taken off the field, at least for the foreseeable future.


A History of Innovation

MCC traces its roots to 1916, when it was founded in Cincinnati as the Franklin Development Company. The founders were impressed by the latest innovations in printing technology, especially the new mechanized presses that enabled the three-color printing process (black was just being introduced as the fourth color at the time). As a consequence of their interest in the new machines, their initial business venture was to incorporate The Printing Machinery Company as a subsidiary. They quickly decided that the business of operating the presses, rather than competing with established press manufacturers, was a better option, and changed the name to Multicolor Type.

By 1918, the company was producing color paper labels. From the beginning, the company focused on big national brands that required consistent color and predictable quality. Early references to the company’s customers in the 1920’s include stalwart names such as Coca-Cola, Colgate-Palmolive, Procter & Gamble, Campbell Soup, and Wrigley chewing gum.

From the humble beginnings in three-color printing, the company steadily evolved its technological prowess, investing heavily in rotogravure printing during the 1950s. Most notably, MCC played the instrumental role in the development of in-mold label technology, which was introduced to the market in 1980.

A Roll-Up of Roll-Ups

The current incarnation of MCC is the product of a steady drumbeat of acquisitions spanning nearly four decades. In 1985, the company acquired Georgia-Pacific's label-printing divisions, followed by an initial public offering two years later. The company focused on building its unique advantage in the in-mold label business, a limited market, while suffering declines in the much larger market for traditional labels. A substantial decline in business occurred when cigarette manufacturers brought packaging printing in-house, amidst the decline in smoking in the US. What followed for MCC was a precursor of today’s challenges as the company limped through the 1990s. There were years in which the company, which was public at the time, reported significant losses.

Beginning in late 1999, the company changed course and began an aggressive campaign of acquisitions and mergers to expand its market position and product offerings. With the acquisition of France-based Buriot International, MCC entered the market for pressure-sensitive labels, which was experiencing significant growth, driven by technological advancements in flexographic printing. Shortly thereafter, MCC acquired Uniflex Corporation, adding heat-shrink labels and tamper-evident bands to its product lineup.

In October 2011, just one month after the launch of The Target Report, MCC made its first appearance in this column and has appeared regularly in our deal logs and commentary ever since. In July 2017, the nature of the transactions changed dramatically in size and impact when MCC acquired the label division of Vienna, Austria-based Constantia Flexibles, itself the product of a concerted roll-up strategy. A year and a half later, Platinum Equity entered the picture and announced that it was taking MCC private in a transaction valued at $2.5 billion, ending MCC’s 32 years as a public company (See The Target Report: Platinum Equity Likes Print – February 2019). The transaction included the assumption of $1.5 billion of debt. When the deal closed later that year, Platinum Equity simultaneously merged MCC with WS Packaging, which it had acquired in 2018.

In July 2021, private equity firm Clayton, Dubilier & Rice (“CD&R”) hit a double, acquiring MCC from Platinum Equity simultaneously with the acquisition of PE-backed Fort Dearborn, one of MCC’s major competitors and itself the result of serial acquisitions (See The Target Report: Packaging Industry Consolidation in Every Direction – July 2021). While the terms of the CD&R transaction were not disclosed, it is a safe assumption that the multiple, layered transactions involved significant debt placed on the combined, and now truly global, organization. According to documents filed with the Bankruptcy Court, as of the filing date, the company’s aggregate outstanding principal amount of prepetition debt obligations stood at $5.9 billion.

The Prepack

In its bankruptcy filing, MCC’s Chief Restructuring Officer outlines a familiar but unforgiving sequence of events. Demand for labels surged as business activity resumed following the Covid shutdowns, colliding with material shortages, labor constraints, and rising input costs. Like many printing and packaging companies, MCC was slow to fully reprice its work to reflect this new cost structure. By prioritizing key customers and managing constrained capacity, the company ceded market share in parts of its business as conditions began to normalize.

The post-Covid demand surge proved temporary. As customers worked through excess inventories, volumes declined more sharply than expected, leaving MCC with a cost structure and capital burden built for a higher level of activity. Policy uncertainty surrounding tariffs further complicated planning and execution, particularly given the company’s global manufacturing footprint. These external pressures were compounded by internal integration challenges, including the absorption of the Fort Dearborn acquisition and subsequent add-on transactions, which proved more difficult and time-consuming than anticipated.

The financial impact was material. Revenue declined from $3.56 billion in 2022 to $3.06 billion in 2025, a decrease of 14%. Over the same period, EBITDA fell from $598 million to $409 million, compressing margins from 16.8% to 13.4%, a meaningful erosion for a business built on scale and predictability. With leverage amplifying the effects of softer demand and operational disruption, MCC elected last month not to make a $36.2 million interest payment, choosing to preserve liquidity and maintain uninterrupted operations.

The prepackaged restructuring plan submitted to the Court is designed to reduce net debt by approximately $3.9 billion, provide more than $550 million in liquidity at closing, lower annual debt service obligations by roughly $350 million, and extend maturities by seven years. Of critical importance to the company’s ongoing operations, and in contrast to many bankruptcies, general unsecured trade creditors will be paid in full, ensuring continuity of supply across MCC’s global manufacturing base.

The existing equity interests held by CD&R will be eliminated under the plan, though the sponsor has committed $889 million of new capital to support the restructuring, including $400 million in newly issued common equity. In practical terms, while the capital structure will be fundamentally reset, CD&R is likely to retain significant influence over the reorganized company, subject to final court approval.

From Growth Darling to Normalized Sector

To be clear, labels are not facing a collapse in demand. End markets remain intact, and the category retains many of the advantages that made it attractive for investment in the first place, including recurring revenue and consolidation opportunities. What we believe has changed is the market’s willingness to treat those advantages as justification for sky-high multiples supported by bleeding-edge leverage.

MCC’s bankruptcy filing, therefore, carries significance well beyond the failure of its own capital structure to survive a softening in the market. It challenges the idea that labels were somehow insulated from the forces now reshaping packaging markets more broadly. Rising interest rates and higher debt-servicing costs, softening consumer demand, and the limits of debt-fueled, acquisition-driven growth have converged, presumably sending a message to owners of all label-printing and converting businesses.

Implications for Independent Owners

For independent label converters, the current moment carries practical implications: sellers’ valuation expectations need to reset.

Many owners likely remain mentally and emotionally anchored to peak-cycle transactions from 2021 and 2022, when competitive auctions and cheap debt pushed label segment enterprise value multiples to historic highs. Owners of label printing companies seeking to sell over the past several years could look to several PE-backed platforms and be confident that buyers would line up to acquire their companies (See The Target Report: Private Equity Fuel$ Consolidation of Label Industry – September 2021).

Today’s buyers are benchmarking against a very different risk environment. Sellers who wait for yesterday’s market to return may face a long, potentially unrequited wait for the hot label-company market to reappear. The takeaway is that the exuberance has cooled, and sellers should expect a rigorous, rational process from buyers. Owners considering a transaction should expect more detailed operational reviews and more conservative deal structures. Expect earnouts, rollover equity, and other risk-mitigation deal structures as buyers seek to share risk and build resilience into their roll-ups.

MCC’s restructuring marks a symbolic turning point. It does not invalidate the label sector’s fundamental strengths, but it does underscore the limits of leverage, consolidation, and optimism when fundamentals soften. For owners of independent label printers, the message is not to panic, but rather to adjust expectations.

   
2026 January - Mergers and Acquisitions in the Printing, Packaging, Paper & Related Industries

Deal Party #1
(Surviving Entity)
Pre-Deal
Revenue
(US$Mil)


Party #1 Address


Deal Party #2
Pre-Deal
Revenue
(US$Mil)


Party #2 Address
Date
Deal
Public
Deal
Value
(US$Mil)

Deal Structure
(Intermediary)


Notes

Press
Links
Crown Paper Group
(Port co. Atlas Holdings)
No Data Port Townsend, WA Richmond, BC Packaging Plant
(Div. Cascades)
$4,790 Kingsey Falls, QC 1/29/26 No Data Acquisition Corrugated packaging Link
International Paper $23,630 Memphis, TN EMEA Packaging $8,500 TBD 1/29/26 No Data Spinoff Paper & paperboard mills Link
Lexington Area Chamber of Commerce No Data Lexington, MO The Lexington News (+2 Titles)
(Prop. Main Street Media)
No Data Lexington, MO 1/28/26 No Data Acquisition
(Dirks, Van Essen)
Community newspapers Link
CherryRoad Media No Data Parsippany, NJ The Carrollton Democrat
(Prop. Main Street Media)
No Data Carrollton, MO 1/28/26 No Data Acquisition
(Dirks, Van Essen)
Community newspaper Link
Allegra (Carol Stream) No Data Carol Stream, IL Image360 No Data Lombard, IL 1/22/26 No Data Acquisition Wide format & sign printing Link
Impact XM
(Port co The Riverside Company)
No Data Dayton, NJ Jack Morton No Data Boston, MA 1/21/26 No Data Merger Experiential & brand graphics Link
Southeastern $45.0 Hialeah, FL Sunbelt Graphics/Dimensional No Data St. Davie, FL 1/19/26 No Data Acquisition Commercial printing Link
Minuteman Press, Buffalo No Data Buffalo, NY XOAR Communications No Data Orchard Park, NY 1/16/26 No Data Acquisition Printing & copying Link
ARC No Data San Ramon, CA Color Reflections No Data Houston, TX 1/15/26 No Data Acquisition Wide-format printing Link
Butterfly Equity No Data Beverly Hills, CA ePac Flexible Packaging No Data Austin, TX 1/15/26 No Data Acquisition Flexible packaging Link
Forum Communications No Data Fargo, ND Sidney Herald (+5 Titles)
(Prop. Wicks Communications)
No Data Sidney, MT 1/14/26 No Data Acquisition
(Dirks, Van Essen)
Community newspapers Link
CJK Group No Data Brainerd, MN WLX & Western Logistics Express No Data Kansas City, MO 1/12/26 No Data Acquisition Logistics Link
PPC Flex
(Port co GTCR)
No Data Buffalo Grove, IL SÜDPACK Operations (US) No Data Oak Creek, WI 1/12/26 No Data Acquisition
(TKO Miller)
Flexible packaging Link
LBU No Data Paterson, NJ Donray Printing No Data Parsippany, NJ 1/9/26 No Data Acquisition Offset dye sublimation printing Link
Crisp Imaging No Data Costa Mesa, CA Piedmont Directional Signs No Data Woodinville, WA 1/8/26 No Data Acquisition Wide format & sign printing Link
Crisp Imaging No Data Costa Mesa, CA A&I Reprographics No Data Ontario, CA 1/7/26 No Data Acquisition Reprographics & wide format Link
Keypoint Intelligence
(Port co. Atar Capital)
No Data Fairfield, NJ DataMaster Online No Data Rennes, France 1/7/26 No Data Acquisition Printer testing service Link
SupplyOne
(Port co. Revelar Capital)
No Data Newtown Square, PA Wertheimer Box No Data McCook, IL 1/6/26 No Data Acquisition Corrugated boxes & displays Link
Sky-High Marketing No Data Waukesha, WI Maple Avenue Printing & Embroidery No Data Big Bend, WI 1/6/26 No Data Acquisition Screen printing Link
United Business Mail No Data Minneapolis, MN Mystic Logistics
(Port co. Main Street Capital)
No Data Glastonbury, CT 1/6/26 No Data Acquisition Marketing Mail Logistics Link
  Bolger No Data Minneapolis, MN American Financial Printing No Data Minneapolis, MN 1/2/26 No Data Acquisition Transactional printing Link


2026 January - Bankruptcy Filings in the Printing, Packaging, Paper & Related Industries



Filing Party

Date
Case
Filed
Pre-Petition
Revenue
(US$Mil)



Case #



Filing Party Address



Circuit



Region & City



Judge



Attorney for Debtor



Notes
Chapter 11 Filings:
Sun Color Corporation 1/30/26 26-60112 North Canton, OH 6th Northern OH
Youngstown
Tiiara N.A. Patton Steven Heimberger Printing inks
  Multi-Color Corporation
(Port co. Clayton, Dubilier & Rice)
1/29/26   26-10910 Atlanta, GA 3rd New Jersey
Trenton
Michael B. Kaplan Michael D. Sirota Label printing & converting
  Chapter 7 Filings:                  
  No Chapter 7 Filings Found this Month --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- ---

   
2026 January - Non-Bankruptcy Closures in the Printing, Packaging, Paper & Related Industries



Closed Company / Facility

Date of Closure
Pre-Closure
Revenue
(US$Mil)



Closing Address
Related Party Related Party
Address
Date Closure Public


Notes

Press
Links
Washington Post - Printing plant Jan-27 No Data North Springfield, VA The Washington Post Washington, D.C. 1/29/26 Newspaper printing plant Link
The Beach Company Jan-26 No Data Coshocton, OH None N/A Jan-26 Printed custom calendars Link
Hersteller May Printing & Embroidery 2/12/26 No Data Graham, TX None N/A Jan-26 Wide format printing & embroidery Link
  The Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
(Prop. Block Communications)
May-26 No Data  Pittsburgh, PA Block Communications Toledo, OH 1/7/26 Newspaper ceasing publication Link