Iconic Tupperware Brands seeks Chapter 11
bankruptcy
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[September 18, 2024]
Tupperware Brands, the company that revolutionized food storage
decades ago, has filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection.
The company plans to continue operating and will seek court approval for
a sale, it said just before midnight on Tuesday. |
Colorful Tupperware products are seen in Bellflower, Calif. on Aug. 5,
2011. (AP Photo/Garrett Cheen, File) |
The
company is seeking bankruptcy protection amid growing struggles
to revitalize its business. Tupperware sales growth improved
during the early days of the COVID-19 pandemic, but overall
sales have been in steady decline since 2018 due to rising
competition. And financial troubles have continued to pile up
for the Orlando, Florida, company.
Doubts around Tupperware's future have floated around for some
time. Last year, the company sought additional financing as it
warned investors about its ability to stay in business and its
risk of being delisted from the New York Stock Exchange.
Shares have fallen 75% this year and closed Tuesday at about 50
cents apiece.
Tupperware experienced explosive growth in the mid 20th century
with the rise of Tupperware parties, first held in 1948.
Tupperware parties gave many women a chance to run their own
businesses out of their homes, selling the products within
social circles.
The system worked so well Tupperware removed its products from
stores three years later. Social changes, namely fewer dinners
made from scratch and more nights spent dining out, took a toll
Tupperware sales.
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