SFX Entertainment Files For Chapter 11 Bankruptcy
The American entertainment conglomerate responsible for massive festivals like Tomorrowland, Electric Zoo, and Stereosonic has officially fallen apart. SFX Entertainment filed for Chapter 11 Bankruptcy in U.S. Bankruptcy Court in Wilmington, Delaware, on Monday after just four years in business. The company had amassed $415 million in debts, of which $300 million will be forgiven, and turned into ownership equity for creditors.
The company was created by Robert F. X. Sillerman in 2012, and was meant to capitalize on the booming popularity of the dance music industry around the world. The company purchased the digital music store, Beatport, in 2013 for an amount rumored to be over $50 million. Eventually, SFX Entertainment went on to purchase event and promotion companies like Life In Color, Made Event (Electric Zoo), and a 75% share in ID&T (Sensation, Tomorrowland).
As the story goes so far, SFX Entertainment has said that the biggest festivals it owns will go on as planned. Beatport released a statement saying that their operations will not be hindered by the bankruptcy declaration either. The Chapter 11 filing will call for SFX to find a new CEO to replace Sillerman, the company to become privately owned, and other financial restructuring. “Of course this was not where we thought we’d be, but with this restructuring we have the opportunity to achieve all that SFX can and will be,” Sillerman said in a statement to the New York Times.
Sillerman had attempted to take control of the company himself in the past, however shareholders dashed that plan. As well, the company had received other undisclosed bids for parts of the company.
It will be interesting to see how this scenario plays out, and whether or not SFX Entertainment can remain intact after the dust from their bankruptcy hearing settles.
This article will be updated with new developments.
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