scorecardThe 10 Famous Brands Most Likely To Disappear This Year
  1. Home
  2. Advertising
  3. The 10 Famous Brands Most Likely To Disappear This Year

The 10 Famous Brands Most Likely To Disappear This Year

10. JCPenney

The 10 Famous Brands Most Likely To Disappear This Year

9. Martha Stewart Living Omnimedia

9. Martha Stewart Living Omnimedia

Layoffs. Sales declines. Management turmoil. And one of its biggest revenue streams comes from JCPenney. Things couldn't be further from "a good thing" at MSO.

Revenues declined 13 percent in 2012 to $122 million; and it lost over $18 million in cash from its balance sheet. There was only $20 million left at year end.

8. Hostess Brands

8. Hostess Brands

Hostess, which sells Twinkies, Ho Hos and Drake's cakes, famously went bankrupt in 2012 and its assets have recently been bought by Apollo Global Management and Metropoulos & Company; Drakes was acquired by McKee. The Hostess company now exists in name only.

7. Lotus

7. Lotus

The sports car maker had to quash a rumor it was going bankrupt earlier this year after a filing emerged for procedural reasons in a U.K. court. However, the company has been dogged for months by rumors that it may not be viable. It sells only 35 cars per quarter.

6. Hotmail

6. Hotmail

Microsoft is killing off the Hotmail brand in favor of Outlook for web email. The brand went off the boil long ago, but its user base was so massive that Gmail only surpassed it in users in November 2012


5. US Airways

5. US Airways

US Airways is acquiring American Airlines, and the new company will be called American Airlines Group — even though US Airways is in charge.

4. Herbalife

4. Herbalife

Activist investor Bill Ackman has shorted 20 million shares of Herbalife on the bet that it's actually a pyramid scheme, not a real company. The firm thinks he's wrong, of course, but this is an existential struggle for Herbalife.

3. Research in Motion

3. Research in Motion

The maker of Blackberry, fighting for survival in a mobile phone market dominated by iPhone and Android, axed its "RIM" moniker in favor of the Blackberry brand earlier this year. It's not clear that the move will be enough to save the company from extinction.

2. Avon

2. Avon

The company refinanced itself this year after this long list of troubles, as described by Bloomberg: "Avon has embarked on a turnaround plan after suffering through declining sales, a bribery investigation and other problems. It hired new CEO Sheri McCoy last April and has begun to slash costs, hoping to save $400 million in three years, cut its dividend, laid off workers and exited some less profitable markets like Vietnam and South Korea." It's not out of the woods yet.

1. MetroPCS

1. MetroPCS

T-Mobile is trying to buy the company. It won't be long before all its stores carry the T-Mobile image of Carly Foulkes in pink and black biker leathers.

Advertisement