Transportation Attorney
Contact a Transportation Attorney


Create and Publish a Tariff

Quick Help

Latest Postings

Sirva to Become a Private Company

Posted by David Piotrowski

Sirva, the parent for North American Van Lines and Allied Van Lines, will become a private company effective immediately. Sirva’s stock will no longer be publicly traded. Sirva’s reorganization plan to emerge from bankruptcy became effective Monday.

For more information, please visit Transport Topics.

The Sirva bankruptcy has been discussed in earlier blog posts on this site:

1. Sirva Bankruptcy
2. Allied Van Lines — Bankrupt!

Posted in: General Information Comments(2) May 12th, 2008

Sirva Bankruptcy

Posted by David Piotrowski

On February 5th, I discussed Allied Van Lines (and Sirva’s) bankruptcy in this post. Today I read an article that discusses how some of Sirva’s creditors are expressing their opposition to the Chapter 11 loan.

Sirva’s unsecured creditors called the moving company’s proposed $150 million bankruptcy loan “unnecessary” and said it shouldn’t be approved. These unsecured creditors feel it gives the secured creditors inappropriate leverage.

Sirva, the parent of Allied Van Lines, will ask the U.S. Bankruptcy Court in Manhattan to sign off on the loan at a final hearing Thursday. The court has already given the company the go-ahead to borrow up to $110 million on the loan pending the final hearing.

It will be intersting to see how the Sirva Bankruptcy pans out. Allied Van Lines is a large household goods moving company, and I wonder if Sirva’s bankruptcy is one of more to come from other large moving companies.

Will the housing downturn also have a major effect on small and medium sized moving companies? What should moving companies be doing now to protect themselves against periodic economic downturns?
—-
Update May 12, 2008: Sirva to Become a Private Company

Posted in: General Information Comments(1) February 28th, 2008