Debt relief is the order of the day for big business.
Bankruptcy filings by retailers, newspapers, casinos, and racetracks have become commonplace. According to the Ottawa Citizen, filings in the first quarter of 2009 were 78 per cent higher than the same period in 2008 and three times higher than in 2007.
So take heart! If a simple payday loan will tide you over, you really can beat the big business bust.
April
Shopping Malls
General Growth Properties Inc., the second largest mall owner in the U.S. One of the biggest real estate failures in U.S. history and one of the largest non-financial companies to succumb to the economic crisis, the Chicago-based giant has been unable to refinance its maturing debt. Filed April 16.
March
Cable
St. Louis-based Charter Communications, the nation’s fourth-largest cable operator. The company, controlled by Microsoft co-founder Paul Allen,hopes to reduce its debt by $8 billion. Filed March 27.
Resorts
Greenbrier Hotel Corp, owner of the posh four-star Greenbrier resort, which has housed numerous presidents and royalty in West Virginia. The company lost its five-star rating in 2000 and has since spent millions to expand its offerings and attract younger visitors. Filed March 19.
Newspapers
Sun-Times Media Group, the Chicago-based parent company of The Chicago-Sun Times and operator of 59 newspapers. The company has no bank debt but owes $608 million in back taxes and penalties. Filed March 13.
Racetracks
Magna Entertainment, one of the largest horse racetrack operators in the US and owner of the Pimlico racetrack, host of the Preakness race. The company’s debt and negative cash flow require it to sell off assets. Internet entrepreneur and Thoroughbred owner Halsey Minor is offering to purchase the company’s properties. Filed March 5.
Motor Homes
Oregon-based Monaco Coach, maker of the Holiday Rambler. Despite cost-cutting measures, the company – along with rest the RV industry — has been decimated by weak consumer confidence, tight credit markets, and record high fuel prices. Filed March 5.
February
More Newspapers
Philadelphia Newspapers, parent company the Philadelphia Inquirer and Philadelphia Daily News. The same conditions that have devastated the broadcast industry — advertising downturn, rising newsprint costs, and the migration of readers to the Internet — caused the company to default on loans last year. Filed February 22.
Casinos
Donald Trump’s casino group Trump Entertainment Resorts, owner and operator of several Atlantic City casino hotels, including the Trump Taj Mahal, Trump Plaza and Trump Marina. The company filed just days after founder Donald Trump quit the board, saying he disagreed with the bondholders’ rejection of his buyout offer. This is the company’s third bankruptcy filing. Filed February 17.
Batteries, Shavers, Pet Care
Atlanta-based Spectrum Brands, maker of Rayovac batteries, Remington shavers, Spectracide lawn-care products, and Nature’s Miracle pet care products. The company was delisted from the New York Stock Exchange in January and its stock values dropped to just over a penny per share. Filed February 3.
January
The President’s Clothes
Chicago-based clothier Hartmarx, the largest maker of men’s tailored clothing in the U.S. The company’s clients include President Obama, who wore Hartmarx creations at the Democratic National Convention in Denver, on election night in Chicago, and at his inauguration. Filed January 23.
Restaurants
ARG Enterprises, owner of Black Angus Steakhouse restaurants. The company is just one in a long string of bankruptcy filings by sit-down restaurants hard hit by the deepening recession. Filed January 15.
Department Stores
Gottschalks, a Fresno-based retailer with department and specialty clothing stores in California, Washington, Alaska, Oregon, Nevada, and Idaho. The 58-store chain is liquidating and closing its doors. Filed January 14.






I thought Trump’s filing was a little ironic, as he is routinely touted as one of the richest and most successful people of all time. He is, and he is a billionaire, but it was through his real estate. Most of his other companies have been troubled. This current filing for Trump Entertainment was the third time it has filed for bankruptcy.