Märklin Trains exits bankruptcy

Märklin Trains exits bankruptcy

By Angela Cotey | January 4, 2011

| Last updated on November 3, 2020


Creditors' meeting approves insolvency plan for the German model train manufacturer

German model railroad manufacturer Märklin is putting insolvency behind it and moving forward with a restructuring plan approved by creditors in December.

Under the plan, Märklin will pay 33 million euros ($43.6 million) to creditors immediately. According to German newspaper Hamburger Abendblatt, the secured creditors — banks including Kreissparkasse Göppingen, BW-Bank and Goldman Sachs — will get the lion’s share of the payout, 27 million euros ($35.7 million).

Unsecured creditors will get 2.5 million euros ($3.3 million).

A Märklin release says a plan is in place to return 100% of claims if the company sells. The creditors’ claims had amounted to about 90 million euros ($119 million) in total, with approximately 61 million euros ($80 million) of that owed to the banks.

The company has a new CEO, Stefan Löbich, and will be overseen by Märklin Holdings GmbH, with a 3-person committee to monitor management including insolvency trustee Michael Pluta, former managing director Dr. Kurt Seitzinger and a representative of the creditors.

The company looked unsuccessfully for a buyer in 2010, and begins 2011 under its own steam. Pluta estimates the company’s 2010 earnings before taxes and interest (EBIT) at 9 million euros ($12 million) on sales of 111 millon euros ($146 million).

Märklin Trains entered bankruptcy in February 2009. Pluta credits two years of postive business as the reason that the firm is able to exit bankruptcy. Märklin has been a model train manufacturer for more than 150 years. For more information on Märklin products visit www.marklin.com.

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