Feds start investigating Krispy Kreme

A couple of weeks ago it was the sale of the corporate jet. This week it’s a federal criminal investigation as formerly high-flying retail doughnut franchisor Krispy Kreme Doughnuts, Inc. moved a step closer to what appears to be an inevitable chapter 11 reorganization.
Krispy Kreme announced yesterday that the U.S. attorney for the Southern District of New York had launched an investigation that appears to be focused on the company’s franchise repurchases and a profit warning that the company issued in May, 2004. As is typical in such announcements, the the Winston-Salem, N.C.-based company said that the company is “cooperating fully” with the investigation. Here are the previous posts over the past year on Krispy Kreme’s mounting troubles.
The investigation deepens the problems facing Krispy Kreme, which is facing a liquidity crisis by the end of March. The company has been struggling with slowing sales and an SEC probe of its accounting practices that began last year. The company is cutting about 25% of its nonstore work force as part of a turnaround plan under Stephen F. Cooper, the Enron restructuring expert who became chief executive at Krispy Kreme in January.
Krispy Kreme stock was trading at $5.36 at the close of New York Stock Exchange composite trading yesterday, leaving the stock at about one-tenth of its peak price in August 2003. The company has also been blasted by multiple shareholder lawsuits over the past several months, which are another reason that chapter 11 appears to be an inevitable part of the company’s reorganization.

Updating the Yukos case — Judge Clark dismisses chapter 11 case

U.S. Bankruptcy Judge Letitia Z. Clark dismissed OAO Yukos’ controversial chapter 11 case yesterday, concluding that there is inadequate precedent for a major foreign oil company to gain the substantial legal protections of a debtor-in-possession under U.S. bankruptcy law. Here is copy of Judge Clark’s Memorandum Opinion and here are the prior posts over the past couple on months on this interesting international case.
Yukos had contended that the U.S. Bankruptcy Court had an adequate basis for jurisdiction over the company because of private American ownership of part of Yukos, two recently-created Texas bank accounts, and the fact that its chief financial officer had recently begun working out of his home in Houston.
Judge Clark’s ruling sends Yukos back to the Russian and International civil justice system in an attempt to find a forum for its claims that the Russian government acted illegally in forcing the December auction of Yukos’s valuable Yuganskneftegaz (“Yugansk”) production unit. Yukos’ former owner, Mikhail Khodorkovsky, remains in jail in Russia on fraud and tax evasion charges.
Yesterday’s decision also concludes the lawsuits that Yukos filed in the Bankruptcy Court resulting from the auction, including its $20 billion “Hail Mary” against four Russian companies, including the Russian government-owned natural gas company OAO Gazprom and oil company OAO Rosneft. Rosneft purchased the Yukos unit from a shell company that that had won auction for Yugansk.
The dismissal of the Yukos case facilitates the Russian government’s probable liquidation of the remainder of Yukos’ assets to generate proceeds to pay the balance of Yukos alleged tax debt to the Russian government. Moreover, the Russian government will probably proceed with the merger of Gazprom and Rosneft, which had been put on hold after Yukos’ chapter 11 case was filed. That planned merger will raise the Russian government’s holding in Gazprom to above 50 percent, which will then allow foreigners to own shares in Gazprom.

It’s “Go Texan Day!”

Read about this great Houston tradition here. This year’s calendar of entertainer performances is here.