Richard Branson's Virgin Orbit files for bankruptcy, to seek buyer
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[April 04, 2023] By
Joey Roulette
WASHINGTON (Reuters) -Richard Branson's Virgin Orbit Holdings filed for
Chapter 11 bankruptcy on Tuesday after the satellite launch company
failed to secure the long-term funding needed to help it recover from a
January rocket failure.
The Long Beach, California-based company lodged the filing in the U.S.
Bankruptcy Court for the District of Delaware seeking a sale of its
assets after announcing the layoff of roughly 85% of its 750 employees
last week.
"We believe that the Chapter 11 process represents the best path forward
to identify and finalize an efficient and value-maximizing sale," Virgin
Orbit CEO Dan Hart said in a statement.
The company listed assets of about $243 million and total debt at $153.5
million as of Sept. 30 in the filing.
Virgin Orbit went public in 2021 through a blank-check deal, raising
$255 million less than expected. Spun off from Branson's space tourism
firm Virgin Galactic in 2017, Virgin Orbit air-launches rockets from
beneath a modified Boeing 747 plane to send satellites into orbit.
Virgin Orbit's strategy has been that launching small rockets from a 747
in flight would allow for short-notice launches from anywhere.
But a shift in demand toward larger launch rockets and more
cost-effective shared rides to space on SpaceX's Falcon 9 rocket over
the past two years raised the competitive stakes for Virgin Orbit,
analysts and industry executives have said.
Virgin Orbit's sixth mission in January with its centerpiece LauncherOne
rocket, the first rocket launch out of Britain, failed to reach orbit
and sent its payload of U.S. and UK intelligence satellites plunging
into the ocean.
The company scrambled to find new funding after the rocket failure,
halting operations and furloughing nearly all its employees on March 15
to conserve cash.
VIRGIN GROUP FUNDING
Branson's Virgin Group, which owned roughly 75% of the launch company,
said it had invested over $1 billion in the unit, including $60 million
in secured loans since November.
Abu Dhabi's sovereign wealth fund Mubadala was the second-biggest
investor in Virgin Orbit with a 17.9% stake.
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Richard Branson, founder of Virgin
Group, poses for a photograph on board of his new cruise liner, the
Scarlet Lady at Dover Port in Dover, Britain, February 21, 2020.
REUTERS/Simon Dawson
Virgin Investments, a unit of Virgin Group, will provide $31.6
million in new money to Virgin Orbit through debtor-in-possession
financing to fund operations while it looks for a buyer in
bankruptcy, the companies said.
Despite the success of his travel and telecommunications businesses,
billionaire Branson has also been associated with a number of
high-profile business failures in an entrepreneurial career that
dates back to the 1970s.
Reuters reported last month that Texas-based Matthew Brown had been
in talks to invest $200 million in the company. Those talks
collapsed, sources told Reuters last week.
Virgin Orbit had a market value of $65 million based on Monday's
closing price, down from more than $3 billion two years ago. Shares
fell 12% in pre-market trading on Tuesday.
Virgin Orbit's bankruptcy filing showed its largest creditor as
London-based Arqit Ltd, which was owed almost $10 million for
services and as a customer deposit. Arqit declined to comment when
contacted by Reuters.
In 2021, Arqit Quantum and Virgin Orbit announced a deal for two
satellite launches intended to provide encryption services to the
"Five Eyes" nations: the United States, the United Kingdom, Canada,
Australia and New Zealand.
Arqit Quantum said in December it would abandon its satellite
development efforts and had found a way to provide secure encryption
through an unspecified "ground infrastructure."
Virgin Orbit's second-largest creditor was the United States Space
Force, which had a deposit of almost $6.8 million for future
launches, according to the filing.
The U.S. Space Force, a branch of the U.S. military, had no
immediate comment.
(Reporting by Joey Roulette in Washington, Jahnavi Nidumolu in
Bengaluru and Kevin Krolicki in Singapore; Editing by Jamie Freed)
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