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US companies tumble into bankruptcy at fastest pace since 2013 under coronavirus stress

Jul 1, 2020, 01:49 IST
Business Insider
A passerby walks past a closed Hertz car rental shop on May 23, 2020 in Paris.Edward Berthelot/Getty Images
  • US companies are filing for Chapter 11 bankruptcy at the fastest pace since 2013, the Financial Times reported Tuesday.
  • Year-to-date filings reached 3,427 on June 24, bringing the metric close to the 3,491 filings made in the first half of 2008.
  • The wave of bankruptcies was largely driven by the coronavirus pandemic and its disruption to global supply chains, consumer spending, and manufacturing activity.
  • Firms across a range of industries have entered insolvency, from car-rental chain Hertz to circus company Cirque du Soleil.
  • Visit the Business Insider homepage for more stories.
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The coronavirus' economic fallout is fueling Chapter 11 bankruptcy filings at the fastest pace since 2013, the Financial Times reported Tuesday.

US filings totaled 3,427 on June 24, according to data from Epiq seen by the Times. The reading also closes in on the financial-crisis reading of 3,491 companies entering bankruptcy in the first half of 2008.

Chapter 11 bankruptcy is among the most popular options for businesses to restructure in the midst of insolvency. Some of the biggest names to file in 2020 include Hertz, JC Penney, J Crew, and Chesapeake Energy. Circus company Cirque du Soleil is one of the latest to join the pack after filing for bankruptcy on Monday.

Read more: JPMorgan breaks down how COVID-19 nearly destroyed one of the market's safest trades — and lays out 3 lessons to help investors tackle future crises

The coronavirus pandemic attacked corporate income on all fronts through the start of the year. The outbreak initially tore into global supply chains and firms with exposure to China as the country issued strict lockdowns. As the virus spread across the rest of the world, quarantine orders stifled consumer spending and manufacturing activity. Companies were forced into months of frozen revenue streams.

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Companies are still a ways away from repeating the bankruptcy trend seen during the last US recession. A total of 8,614 firms filed for bankruptcy protection in 2008 before an additional 12,644 companies filed the following year, according to the Times. Still, rising coronavirus case counts could prolong shutdowns and boost insolvency across industries.

The wave of bankruptcies isn't deterring companies from issuing debt to ride out the pandemic. Investment-grade bond sales surged past the $1 trillion threshold at the fastest pace in history in late May as companies rushed to take advantage of strong risk-on activity. The Federal Reserve's move into corporate debt markets prompted an influx of investors looking to buy companies' bonds. The same threshold wasn't breached until November in 2019.

Now read more markets coverage from Markets Insider and Business Insider:

The Dow can hit 30,000 by 2021 if Republicans keep the Senate and the coronavirus is contained, Wharton professor Jeremy Siegel says

The coronavirus' resurgence could drag the US recovery into an L- or W-shaped trend, Bank of America says

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Goldman Sachs has formulated a strategy that could triple the market's return within a year as volatility remains higher than normal — including 11 new stock picks for the months ahead

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