Spider-Man and Captain America are a powerful duo, but even they couldn't muster enough strength to save parent Marvel Entertainment Group from the clutches of bankruptcy court.
The nation's largest comic book purveyor, also the No. 1 producer of trading cards, succumbed Friday and filed for Chapter 11 protection from creditors. The under-lying trouble is that collectors who bought with abandon in the late 1980s and early '90s have lost their appetite for comics and cards.Further complicating the plot, which has more twists than a Spider-Man serial, is a web of intrigue pitting Marvel owner Ronald Perelman against bondholder Carl Icahn, both renowned takeover artists.
Marvel was once a stock-market superhero that made big money for investors. Adjusted for stock splits, the price climbed 16-fold past $34 about 21/2 years after it was sold to the public in 1991.
The stock closed at $2.371/2 on Thursday, down 121/2 cents. Marvel trading was halted Friday on New York Stock Exchange following the bankruptcy news.
"It's been pretty disappointing," said Alexander Paris Jr., senior investment analyst at Barrington Research Associates Inc. in Chicago. "The Marvel brand has a lot of intangible value. It's going to survive one way or the other."
So far, though, Perelman, who owns about 81 percent of Marvel through his Andrews Group and other companies, has been doing everything in his power to keep the company. Touching off the bankruptcy filing was the unwillingness of creditors, including Icahn, to accept a Perelman restructuring plan.
Under that plan, Perelman would have spent $350 million for about 80 percent of new Marvel shares. Perelman then would have merged Marvel with another company, Toy Biz Inc., which has enough cash flow and assets to shore up Marvel's finances.
Icahn rejected Perelman's plan, saying it would give Perelman control of the company for a fraction of its value. Icahn suggested instead a $350 million takeover of the company by himself and other bondholders.
Now, the U.S. bankruptcy court in Delaware, where Marvel is incorporated, will have to sort it out.
In its filing, Marvel Entertainment, which is based in New York, listed assets of $229.6 million and liabilities of $693.2 million.
Marvel titles haven't enjoyed success like they once did because of the cooling collectors market.