Saturday, March 7, 2020

Catching the Wave in Corrugated Cartons – February 2020 M&A Activity


The Welch Packaging Group stepped up and acquired PAX Corrugated Products from Georgia-Pacific. The acquired company’s product line, corrugated cartons, is consistent with every company that Welch has acquired in the 35 years since the owner established the company with only four employees and rudimentary box making equipment. With this latest acquisition, Welch Packaging now serves the Midwest market from 16 locations and three distribution centers with over 1,300 employees.

The steady drum beat of acquisitions executed by Welch may very well represent one of the clearest and most highly focused growth-by-acquisition strategies in the printing and related industries: corrugated products, custom production, all within 550 miles of the home base in Elkhart, Indiana. Not once has the owner veered off the path of building a super-regional powerhouse connected by one common thread, corrugated products.

While this acquisition was not in any way a strategic departure for Welch, it does represent a change in tactic as this seller was not a family or entrepreneur, rather the seller was a large privately owned company. Georgia-Pacific, owned by Koch Industries, acquired the PAX Corrugated Products company not so long ago, in August 2017. However, at the time, PAX was family owned, and presumably has retained the feel of a cohesive “family-like” unit within the short hold time by Georgia-Pacific. In any event, the deal is still on point strategically for Welch Packaging Group.

In addition to representing excellence in executing a growth-by-acquisition strategy, the Welch Packaging Group is another example of the emerging trend we noted a few months ago; financially healthy and operationally efficient regional companies leapfrog to an adjacent metro market and build out an additional geographic market position via a series of strategically sound acquisitions. (See The Target Report: Commercial Printing: Consolidation or Regional Expansion?)



Activity Picks Up in Wide Format Segment

We have noted in our last two annual recaps that the landscape is changing in the wide format segment (see The Target Report Annual Recap: August 2019 and The Target Report: It’s Back to School Time, August 2018). Taken together, a multitude of transactions, including a notable number of bankruptcy filings, non-bankruptcy plant closures, and a steady number of acquisitions, indicated that the market for wide format printing services was getting more competitive. Digital wide format printing equipment is now ubiquitous, including installations at many commercial printing establishments that flocked to the higher margins promised by wide format services. Change is afoot in wide format.

As pricing pressure increases at the lower end of the product offerings (e.g. small signs, banners, etc.), the larger and more sophisticated wide format providers are increasingly focused on providing value-added services such as image enhancement, image repurposing, onsite installation and managing the logistics required for large campaign launches.

GSP, a multi-location wide format service provider headquartered in Clearwater, Florida, acquired Custom Color, based in Lenexa, Kansas. The merged companies provide retail marketing graphics and in-store displays. GSP announced plans to continue operating at the acquired facility in Kansas, adding to its other locations in Utah and Wisconsin. Much more than simply a wide format printing company, GSP is positioned to provide a full range of services dedicated to retail environments, from photography to managing complete in-store installation.

Power Marketing + Printing, an Alpharetta, Georgia-based diversified graphics company, acquired Atlanta-based Market Place Color. The acquired company brings extensive wide format production capabilities to the combined entity, including production of backlit transparent displays. The transaction strategically expands the buyer’s breadth of services via an acquisition, versus the other option of developing the new services internally. In one fell swoop, Power Marketing + Printing acquires decades of experience in analog and digital wide format printing services.

Direct Edge Media, headquartered in Anaheim, California, announced the purchase of Sign Language XL, located in Denver, Colorado. The acquired company specializes in the production of event venue signage, out-of-home billboards and point-of-purchase signage. Unlike the Power Marketing + Printing transaction, this deal represents the more common rationale behind most acquisitions in the printing industry; consolidating competing operations into a unified more efficient whole. Direct Edge Media will be moving its existing Denver team into the Sign Language XL location. The previous owner of Sign Language XL was AEG, a sports and live entertainment company that owns, manages or consults with arenas, stadiums, convention centers and performing arts centers to produce music, sports and other events. Previously providing in-house graphic support to AEG, the spun-off company will continue to provide services to AEG, now a customer.

Thomas Printworks, a multi-location reprographic, printing and wide format company based in Houston, has picked up Austin-based Dynamic Reprographics. Both companies started as providers of blueprints and plan documents to the AEC market (architects, engineers and construction companies). The blueprinting business evolved from traditional (and noxious) ammonia-based analog blueprints into digital technologies that produce wide format black and white plan documents, accompanied by toner-based bid and specification books. As digital technologies took hold and color was introduced into products serving the AEC market, it was a small leap for reprographic shops (as blueprint shops became known) to jump into the commercial printing business while maintaining their core focus on the AEC market. (Another example of the much-discussed “convergence” occurring in the printing industry.) Mirroring the nature of the AEC professions, reprographic shops have been essentially a local business. Consistent with this, roll-ups in the reprographic business are characterized by many locations, each serving a local clientele. Thomas Printworks, now boasting in excess of $66 million of revenue, maintains this locality-based characteristic, with 28 locations across four states.

Spicers Canada, a division of Central National Gottesman, announced the acquisition of All Graphic Supplies, a distributor of wide format supplies headquartered in Mississauga, Ontario. All Graphic Supplies brings seven locations across Canada and the Caribbean to the Spicers distribution network. In another trend we see in the printing industry, paper distributors, faced with declining demand for their core products, are acquiring distributors that supply multiple printing segments in addition to their traditional printing company customers, including sign graphics, textiles, digital label and industrial printing companies.



2020 February - Mergers and Acquisitions in the Printing, Packaging, Paper & Related Industries

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


Party #1 Address


Deal Party #2
Pre-Deal
Revenues
($Mil )


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

Deal Structure
(Intermediary)


Notes

Press
Release
Graphic Packaging $6,160 Atlanta, GA Consumer Packaging Group
(Div. Greif)
$200.0 Delaware, OH 2/27/20 $85.0 Acquisition Folding cartons Link
Platecrafters No Data Colmar, PA Flexographic Plate Division
(Sub. Sun Chemical)
$7,500 Parsippany, NJ 2/26/20 No Data Acquisition Flexographic plates Link
Welch Packaging Group No Data Elkhart, IN PAX Corrugated Products
(Div. Georgia-Pacific)
No Data Lebanon, OH 2/22/20 No Data Acquisition Corrugated boxes Link
 Rajiv Yajnik No Data Southampton, PA Minuteman Press Franchise No Data Southampton, PA 2/21/20 No Data Acquisition Printing & copying Link
Joseph Merritt & Company No Data Hartford, CT Northeast Printing Network No Data Cromwell, CT 2/20/20 No Data Acquisition Commercial printing Link
Church Offset No Data Albert Lea, MN Marketing Plus No Data Albert Lea, MN 2/19/20 No Data Acquisition Direct mail & marketing Link
Supremex $191.7 LaSalle, QC Royal Envelope $30.0 Concord, ON 2/18/20 $27.4 Acquisition Envelope manufacturing Link
Lindenmeyr Munroe
(Div. Central National Gottesman)
$6,800 Purchase, NY Wilcox Paper No Data Champlin, MN 2/18/20 No Data Acquisition Printing papers distribution Link
CCL Industries $4,069 Toronto, ON Clinical Systems $14.4 Garden City, NY 2/18/20 $19.4 Acquisition Clinical trial labels & system Link
Atlantic Corporation No Data Wilmington, NC Coastal Corrugated No Data North Charleston,
SC
2/17/20 No Data Acquisition Corrugated boxes Link
Domtar $5,220 Fort Mill, SC Appvion POS Paper Business
(Div. Appvion)
No Data Appleton, Wi 2/14/20 No Data Acquisition Specialty papers Link
Jake Wood No Data Phoenix, AZ Muscle & Fitness (+other titles)
(Prop American Media)
No Data New York, NY 2/14/20 No Data Acquisition Magazine publisher Link
GSP No Data Clearwater, FL  Custom Color No Data Lenexa, KS 2/12/20 No Data Acquisition
(New Direction)
Wide format, in-store display Link
OneTouchPoint
(Port Co. ICV Partners)
$138.7 Hartland, WI Bluewater No Data Bloomington, MN 2/11/20 No Data Acquisition Digital marketing services Link
PCI Pharma Services No Data Philadelphia, PA Bellwyck Pharma Services No Data Toronto, ON 2/11/20 No Data Acquisition Pharma packaging  Link
Quad/Graphics $3,920 Sussex, WI Apple Tree Group No Data Mexico City,
Mexico
2/10/20 No Data Acquisition Retail creative services Link
Pixelle Specialty Solutions
(Port co. Lindsay Goldberg)
No Data Spring Grove, PA Specialty Papers Business
(Div. Verso Paper)
$2,440 Memphis, TN 2/10/20 No Data Acquisition Specialty paper mills Link
Koehler Paper Group $873.5 Oberkirch, Germany Beaver Paper & Graphic Media No Data Lawrenceville, GA 2/10/20 No Data Acquisition Specialty papers Link
Cox Enterprises $21,000 Atlanta, GA Ohio Newspapers (3 titles)
(Prop. Cox Media Group)
No Data Atlanta, GA 2/10/20 No Data Acquisition Daily Newspapers Link
Komori $897.0 Tokyo, Japan MBO Group $57.0 Oppenweiler,
Germany
2/7/20 No Data Acquisition Bindery equipment Link
Mele Printing $19.5 Covington, LA Printing Tech $2.1 Baton Rouge, LA 2/6/20 No Data Acquisition Commercial printing Link
Power Marketing + Printing No Data Alpharetta, GA Market Place Color No Data Atlanta, GA 2/5/20 No Data Acquisition Wide format & retail display Link
Resource Label Group
(Port co. First Atlantic Capital)
No Data Memphis, TN Axiom Label & Packaging No Data Compton, CA 2/5/20 No Data Acquisition Labels & flexible packaging Link
Direct Edge Media No Data Anaheim, CA Sign Language XL No Data Denver, CO 2/4/20 No Data Acquisition Wide format & retail display Link
Thomas Printworks $66.5 Houston, TX Dynamic Reprographics No Data Austin, TX 2/3/20 No Data Acquisition Reprographics & wide format Link
Spicers Canada
(Div. Central National Gottesman)
$6,800 Purchase, NY All Graphic supplies No Data Mississauga, ON 2/3/20 No Data Acquisition Wide format supplies Link
Nosco
(Sub. Holden Industries)
No Data Waukegan, IL Haapanen Brothers No Data Gurnee, IL 2/3/20 No Data Acquisition Commercial printing Link


2020 February - Bankruptcy Filings in the Printing, Packaging, Paper & Related Industries



Filing Party

Date
Case
Filed
Pre-Petition
Revenues
($Mil )



Case #



Filing Party Address



Circuit



Region & City



Judge



Attorney for Debtor



Notes
Chapter 11 Filings:
The McClatchy Company
(and 52 affiliates)
2/13/20 $739.4 20-10418 Sacramento, CA 2nd Southern NY
New York
Michael E. Wiles Shana Elberg Newspaper Publisher
API Americas Inc.
(Sub. API Group Limited, UK)
2/2/20 No Data 20-10239 Lawrence, KS 3rd Delaware
Wilmington
Christopher S. Sontchi Edward P. Christian  Metallic foil & substrates
Chapter 7 Filings:
Colorxpress, Inc. 2/25/20 No Data 20-80560 Huntsville, AL 11th Northern AL
Decatur
Clifton R. Jessup Jr. G. John Dezenberg, Jr. Commercial printing
Gilead Publishing, LLC 2/25/20 No Data 20-05110 Wheaton, IL 7th Northern IL
Chicago
Janet S. Baer Arthur W. Rummler  Religious book publishing
East Coast Envelope & Graphics, LLC 2/20/20 No Data 20-41023 Maspeth, NY 2nd Eastern NY
Brooklyn
Elizabeth S. Stong Julie Cvek Curley Envelope manufacturing
Southeast Print Programs, Inc.  2/7/20 No Data 20-01076 Tampa, FL 11th Middle FL
Tampa
Roberta A. Colton Stanley J Galewski Franchise marketing


2020 February - Non-Bankruptcy Closures in the Printing, Packaging, Paper & Related Industries



Closed Company / Facility

Date of Closure
Pre-Closure
Revenues
($Mil )



Closing Address
Related Party Related Party
Address
Date Closure Public


Notes

Press
Releases
Springfield News-Leader - Printing facility Mar-20 No Data Springfield, MO Gannett McLean, VA 2/19/20 Consolidating print production Link
Triangle Printing & Packaging 4/30/20 No Data York, PA None N/A Feb-20 Folding cartons Link
Mail Handling Group 3/25/20 No Data Eden Prairie, MN None N/A Feb-20 Direct mail printing Link
Dexter Solutions Mar-20 No Data Memphis, TN None N/A Feb-20 Commercial printing Link

Thursday, February 6, 2020

The Smartest Investor Ever Exits Newspapers – January 2020 M&A Activity

Warren Buffet, arguably the greatest investor in the world, has decided to leave the club of billionaires that own and support publications that have been withering and would otherwise be facing certain death and closure. We see his exit as especially significant. While many newspapers lower page counts, publish three or four days instead of seven, reduce page size and cut run lengths, there has been a promising star on the horizon: Warren Buffet the “Oracle from Omaha.” Buffet acquired newspapers in mid-size cities and smaller towns across the country, and often expressed confidence while others predicted doom. That hopeful light has gone out with the sale of BH Media Group, the umbrella company for most of Berkshire Hathaway’s newspapers. The Buffalo News, which was owned independently of the group, was also included in the sale, making the exit virtually complete.

The buyer, Lee Enterprises of Davenport, Iowa, will add 31 daily newspapers to the 50 it already owns and nearly double its readership. Announcing the sale, Buffet stated that “We had zero interest in selling the group to anyone else for one simple reason: We believe that Lee is best positioned to manage through the industry’s challenges.” While the announcement of the sale surprised many in the newspaper industry, since Buffet is famously not a seller of companies once acquired, the choice of buyer was not surprising. The relationship between the two companies goes back at least to 2012 when Buffet’s Berkshire Hathaway rescued Lee Enterprises out of bankruptcy, buying $85 million of Lee’s debt that was held by Goldman Sachs. Berkshire was reported at that time to also have acquired an equity position in Lee approaching 4%. Lee Enterprises was choking on the debt hangover from its $1.46 billion purchase of the Pulitzer papers back in 2005 as well debt from other prior acquisitions that comprise the Lee collection of newspaper titles. In 2013, Berkshire Hathaway came to Lee’s rescue again, refinancing the remaining Pulitzer debt at a reduced fixed interest rate and extended maturity date, and with no up-front financing fees to boot.

As the relationship deepened between the two companies, in June 2018 BH Media handed over the daily management of most of its newspapers and digital media products to Lee, effectively exiting the operational aspects of the newspaper business. Clearly, a sale to any company other than Lee Enterprises would have been very difficult, given that Lee was already deeply entrenched in the day-to-day running of the newspapers.

The total revenue of the sold properties was $373.4 million last year, with a respectable adjusted EBITDA of $47.4 million (12.7%). Lee Enterprises paid $140 million cash which represents a multiple of 3.0x times EBITDA, which we hear is typical for newspapers in today’s market. Expressed relative to revenues, the price paid was 37% of 2019 revenues.

Buffet has been a man with a deep affinity for newspapers his entire life. He started his business career selling magazines door to door, and was a newspaper delivery boy in high school, back when such a thing existed. One tale about Buffet’s entrepreneurial spirt claims that he personally delivered over 500,000 papers before moving onto bigger and better business ventures, placing pinball machines in barber shops and then selling the enterprise for a tidy profit. Known for his folksy and modest style, Buffet has enthusiastically conducted and participated in a newspaper throwing contest each year at the company’s annual meeting. Not the typical sport of billionaires!

Nonetheless, ever the diligent investor, Buffet saw that the newspaper business was coming to an end, at least for those publishing in the secondary metro, regional and community markets. In April 2019, Buffet served up his prognosis for the newspaper industry in an interview with Yahoo Finance in which he announced that newspapers, with the possible exception of the big three, “are going to disappear.” Buffet added that the newspaper business “went from monopoly, to franchise, to competitive, to … toast.”

Despite the apparent exit from the newspaper business, Berkshire Hathaway remains deeply invested in the business that Lee acquired; the funds used to pay the $140 million purchase price were lent to Lee by Berkshire Hathaway! In addition, Berkshire ramped up the financing package to a total of $576 million at 9% annually with a 25-year maturity and no performance covenants, paying off all of Lee’s other lenders. The lifeline of extended fixed rate debt was rewarded with a 67% bump up in Lee’s stock price by the end of the day. Effectively, Berkshire Hathaway has traded its operational and equity position in for a senior secure debt position but still bears the risk that Lee can navigate the highly likely impending wind-down of the printed products and concurrent transition to digitally delivered local and regional content.

Tellingly, Berkshire Hathaway has retained title to all the real estate, granting Lee ten-year lease terms on the properties associated with the publishing assets. It’s worth noting that the real estate is often the gem that remains when many local newspapers eventually shut down the printing operations. As noted recently by industry pundit Frank Romano, remarking on the repurposing of former newspaper headquarters, “one condo in the iconic Chicago Tribune building was offered for $7.6 million.” Despite having sold the publishing business at what appears to be a loss, it may be that the real estate, retained by Buffet’s company, may in the end prove him once again to be the smartest investor after all.

Wide Format, Retail Display & Outdoor

TC Transcontinental, after engineering a dramatic and consistently executed strategic transformation from Canada’s biggest printer of publications into a flexible packaging manufacturing powerhouse, has now embarked on another strategic direction. Similar to the company’s move into flexible packaging, the new direction is clearly articulated. The company’s latest press release announced the recent acquisition of Artisan Complete Limited as “aligned with TC Transcontinental’s strategy to continue growing in the in-store marketing product printing vertical, where the Corporation is already a key player in Canada.” With its second acquisition of a wide format, in-store display printing company within a three-month period, Transcontinental is, as before, unswervingly executing its strategy. While not eschewing the possibility of further acquisition activity in the flexible packaging space, the company is clearly pursuing another new direction.

As other large publication-centric printing companies stumble strategically with loosely described efforts to offer every service imaginable or move upstream and compete with and/or acquire creative advertising agencies, TC Transcontinental continues to transform itself via acquisitions to develop new well-defined production-oriented segments of its business that are adjacent to its historical strengths, but with more promising future prospects than its traditional publication printing business (see The Target Report: April 2018, Getting Flexible in Your Middle Years).

In other transactional activity in the wide format and related services segment, Gemspring Capital acquired Skyline Displays which provides hardware, pop-up booths and much more for displays and exhibits for trade shows and events. Simultaneously, Gemspring bought TradeTec, the largest formerly independent dealer of Skyline products. The two companies will be combined under the Skyline brand.

Outdoor Image, located in Duluth, Georgia and a provider of out-of-home advertising and related services, has acquired Kramer Graphics in Dayton, Ohio. Kramer produces graphics for billboards, point-of-purchase displays, grand format building drapes, vehicle wraps and large-scale floor graphics. The company intends to retain all current staff and operate both locations.

Circle Graphics, one of many print-centric portfolio companies owned by mega private equity firm H.I.G. Capital (see The Target Report: November 2019, Diversified Graphic and Marketing Services) took quick advantage of H.I.G.’s bountiful financial backing and acquired Metromedia Technologies. Based in New York City, with additional facilities in Ohio and California, Metromedia produces super-sized graphics that adorn buildings in Times Square and other high-intensity areas requiring skilled installation, wrap double-decker buses, and decorate sports arenas. The roll-up in grand format has begun in earnest.

Commercial Printing and Diversified Services

Graphic Village, based in Cincinnati, Ohio, is back on our deal log again. The company has grown strategically through acquisition; its latest move the purchase of Intrinzic which it identified as a “branding consultancy.” The acquired company provides brand concept development, design services, social media marketing, SEO, and other digital marketing services. Graphic Village has grown into a $22 million diverse graphic services company via serial acquisitions, including a folding carton manufacturer and a commercial printing company, both acquired in 2018. (See more about Graphic Village and links to other sources in The Target Report: September 2018).

Hederman Brothers Printing, a commercial printing company in Madison, Mississippi that dates back to 1898, has acquired Service Printers, a local commercial printer that will be tucked-in. The company has also recently diversified from its traditional offset and digital printing offerings and added wide format services, banners and vehicle wraps.



2020 January - Mergers and Acquisitions in the Printing, Packaging, Paper & Related Industries

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


Party #1 Address


Deal Party #2
Pre-Deal
Revenues
($Mil )


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

Deal Structure
(Intermediary)


Notes

Press
Release
CCL Industries$4,069Toronto, ONIbertex Etiquetaje / Eti-Textil$7.7Elche, Spain1/31/20$19.6AcquisitionApparel labelsLink
Lee Enterprises$509.9Davenport, IABH Media Group
(Div. Berkshire Hathaway)
$373.4Omaha, NE1/29/20$140.0AcquisitionNewspaper publishingLink
Mitchell PressNo DataBurnaby, BCNorth West Book Operating Co.No DataBellingham, WA1/29/20No DataAcquisitionBindery servicesLink
cdsPrintNo DataCincinnati, OHKwik Kopy Business CenterNo DataTaylor Mill, KY1/28/20No DataAcquisitionPrinting & copyingLink
MaxcessNo DataOklahoma City, OKRotoMetrics
(Port. Co. Sentinel Capital)
No DataEureka, MO1/28/20No DataMergerConverting diesLink
Graphic Packaging$6,160Atlanta, GAFolding carton plant
(Div Quad/Graphics)
No DataOmaha, NE1/28/20$40.0Asset Acquisition
(Mesirow)
Folding cartonsLink
Monotype Imaging HoldingsNo DataWoburn, MAFontsmithNo DataLondon, UK1/27/20No DataAcquisitionFonts and design servicesLink
Graphic Village$22.0Cincinnati, OHIntrinzicNo DataCincinnati1/27/20No DataAcquisitionMarketing agencyLink
OSG Billing Services
(Port co. Aquiline Capital)
No DataRidgefield Park, NJGabriel GroupNo DataEarth City, MO1/24/20No DataAcquisition
(Corp Dev Assoc)
Transactional printingLink
Hederman Brothers Printing$13.9Madison, MSService PrintersNo DataFlowood, MS1/21/20No DataAcquisitionCommercial printingLink
Inx International
(Div. Sakata Inx Corp.)
No DataSchaumburg, ILRUCO DruckfarbenNo DataEppstein, Germany1/20/20No DataAcquisitionInk manufacturerLink
Gould Paper$5,000New York, NYMcGrann PaperNo DataCharlotte, NC1/16/20No DataAcquisitionPaper distributorLink
Gemspring CapitalNo DataWestport, CTSkyline DisplaysNo DataEagan, MN1/15/20No DataAcquisitionTrade show displaysLink
EO Johnson Business TechnologiesNo DataWausau, WIStandard DynamicsNo DataBurnsville, MN1/14/20No DataAcquisitionPrint equipment distributorLink
Transcontinental$3,040Montreal, QCArtisan CompleteNo DataMarkham, ON1/13/20No DataAcquisitionWide format, in-store displayLink
Outdoor ImageNo DataDuluth, GAKramer GraphicsNo DataDayton, OH1/8/20No DataAcquisitionWide format printingLink
Michael KishaNo DataSarasota, FLSun Graphic TechnologiesNo DataSarasota, FL1/8/20No DataAcquisition
(New Direction)
Wide format printingLink
Industrial Opportunity PartnersNo DataEvanston, ILMidwest Paper GroupNo DataCombined Locks, WI1/8/20No DataAcquisitionRecycled paper millLink
Continental Plastic CardNo DataPompano, FLBiz-MagNo DataWeston, FL1/6/20No DataMergerPlastic card, magnet printingLink
Media CentralNo DataVaughan, ONGeorgia Straight
(Prop. Vancouver Free Press)
No DataVancouver, BC1/6/20$1.3AcquisitionCommunity newspaperLink
Dobbs Management Service
w/ Clavis Capital Partners
No DataMemphis, TNDCG OneNo DataSeattle, WA1/2/20No DataAcquisitionDiverse marketing servicesLink
Circle Graphics
(Port Co. H.I.G. Capital)
No DataLongmont, COMetromedia TechnologiesNo DataNew York, NY1/2/20No DataAcquisitionGrand & wide format printingLink
CFSNo DataNorton, MANew England Professional SystemsNo DataHolliston, MA1/2/20No DataAcquisitionDirect Mail & fulfillmentLink


2020 January - Bankruptcy Filings in the Printing, Packaging, Paper & Related Industries



Filing Party

Date
Case
Filed
Pre-Petition
Revenues
($Mil )



Case #



Filing Party Address



Circuit



Region & City



Judge



Attorney for Debtor



Notes
Chapter 11 Filings:
Schurman Fine Papers1/23/20No Data20-10135Goodlettsville, TN3rdDelaware
Wilmington
John T. DorseyNicolas Jenner Fine stationery, greeting cards
Chapter 7 Filings:
X-Press Envelope & Printing, Inc.1/2/20No Data20-30003Pottsboro, TX5thNorthern Texas
Dallas
Harlin DeWayne HaleJoyce W. Lindauer Envelope printing


2020 January - Non-Bankruptcy Closures in the Printing, Packaging, Paper & Related Industries



Closed Company / Facility

Date of Closure
Pre-Closure
Revenues
($Mil )



Closing Address
Related PartyRelated Party
Address
Date Closure Public


Notes

Press
Releases
Whitehall Printing Company2/13/20No DataNaples, FLN/ANoneJan-20Commercial printingLink
LSC Communications - Printing facilityJul-20No DataStrasburg, VALSC CommunicationsChicago, IL1/14/20Magazine and catalog printingLink
LSC Communications - Printing facilityJul-20No DataGlasgow, KYLSC CommunicationsChicago, IL1/14/20Magazine and catalog printingLink
LSC Communications - Printing facilityJul-20No DataMattoon, ILLSC CommunicationsChicago, IL1/14/20Magazine and catalog printingLink