Today I received legal notice that Exide Technologies is filing under Chapter 11. A meeting of creditors is scheduled for 2:00 July 16th. Attendance at this meeting is not required to pursue a claim.
Today I received legal notice that Exide Technologies is filing under Chapter 11. A meeting of creditors is scheduled for 2:00 July 16th. Attendance at this meeting is not required to pursue a claim.
People may laugh at me, but that's ok. I laugh all the way to the bank.
hmm trying to shed some debt ????
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I've heard that there are only a couple of battery manufacturers in North America. (most of the brand names are just sticker slaps to the same battery....) So this could mean we end up buying more crap from China?
Could someone who knows more about battery manufacturing in N.A. fill us in on what this bankruptcy means to the battery market and to us scrappers?
Jon.
Exide had a plant in Frisco, Tx that is costing them a ton of money (Frisco Recycling Center Closure). The city grew up around them, the new neighbors started complaining about the environmental impact of their operation, then they had to sink significant dollars into an environmental cleanup. I'm sure that is part of what pushed them into bankruptcy.
Similar non-sense going on with gun ranges that once sat outside of town are suddenly surrounded by housing and they get shutdown. Drives me crazy when people move to the country to get away from the city but quickly expect their new surroundings to be like the city they were trying to get away from.
That's what happens up here. People move to rural Maine to "get away from it all". Then they want street lights, sidewalks, sewers, paved roads, police etc. In short, they want to duplicate where they came from.
Exide jumped to nasdaq a couple days ago. the whole thing started snowballing when they lost the Walmart account a couple years ago to Johnson Controls. one of the last nails in the coffin was placed there with the Frisco recycling center fiasco (as mentioned by Telecom guy above) and then problems in a California facility, gave them $71 million in non-recurring expenses. Those nails were pounded home by a flurry of class action lawsuits by stockholders. Being a former stockholder, I get the mailings. Funny thing is, I made money on XIDE, so I just toss them out. A lot of day traders made money on XIDE, it regularly moved up & down 15 cents a day as it rollercoastered along in the $3.00 range from 2011-2012.
Right now it's resumed trading as XIDEQ and it's a 14 cent stock, bankrupt on 2.9 Billion in sales, down $100 million from a year ago. Other domestic battery makers, even small ones, are making money. But I don't see anyone with enough capacity to pick up even the domestic sales volume Exide has, so I don't think Exide is going away. It's a troubled company, for sure, but I really think this is a much different bankruptcy than the recent Kodak thing.
What it means to scrappers, I don't have a clue. Other than, if you have some cash you can afford to lose, XIDEQ might be worth taking a chance on.
Last edited by volvoscrapper; 06-28-2013 at 02:08 PM.
That's what I thought too, so I'm betting 100$ that pony wont come in last !
does any of this mean the scrap price for batteries is going to drop ?
Exide closed its NZ plant a month or few ago. It's always been subject of arguement because of the lead emissions.
Good, bad, and ugly: Exide to close | frogblog
Many of the lobbyists in Washington, that seem to be fighting for more green products and manufacturing techniques are being funded by Chinese corporations. What is so wrong about this is that the same corporations who are funding these lobbyists here in the USA are most of the time not using environmental friendly practices in China.
The other problem is that to re-tool to be able to keep up with the latest and greatest manufacturing techniques usually takes a substantial investment. And if you have to incur the costs of EPA clean up, even more. When you are starting a new business it's easy to comply with the new standards, if you already exist, it's far more difficult and unlikely.
This is what has happened to our metal plating industry here in the United States. Most of that type of work has gone overseas because it has become almost impossible to comply with the EPA requirements not to mention State requirements in order to conduct business.
The other little known fact about the EPA, is once a fund is created, the EPA is funded, and if you are a sizable company with a large cleanup, this means a huge giant super fund. Once a government program is funded, specially when we are talking about 10s of millions of dollars, the EPA doesn't want to ever complete the cleanup, because that means the end of their fund. Money = power. So I would imagine once the cleanup turned into a EPA fund, the EPA was never going to allow the company to ever finish cleaning things up, which put them in a state they were not able to continue conducting business.
If anyone knows about Iron Mountain Mine here in California, you will see my meaning. Back in the 60s, Iron Mountain Mine was shut down because of the environmental impact it was causing. What The short of the story goes something like this.
Iron Mountain Mine was one of the largest copper mines in the United States. Problem was, that once the mountain was cracked open and exposed, a certain type of bacteria started producing acids, what it does is eat the sulfur, and creates sulfuric acid which in turn dissolves the sulfur metals, or solid metals which pollute the water.
It was put under EPA control in something like 1983, and is now the largest EPA superfund in the US. I was working with a few chemists that had designed a method to extract the metals out of the water, we were working on a bid in an attempt to get the cleanup, which would be funded by the EPA superfund. While cleaning up the water, we would also be able to extract the metals, it was a win/win situation.
We were not even considered, instead BEAR, that's right the same company that makes aspirin, was able to get the contract instead. And they are not cleaning up anything. What they do instead is simply **** up the water coming out of the mountain during the summer, when water flow is low, and then during the winter, release it into the rivers and streams. The problem is that it enters into the Sacramento river along with several other important rivers that provide water to farms in the valley.
You can google this information to read about the full story. Iron Mountain Mines will never be cleaned up, and people who owned the property ended up loosing everything, and have since went into bankruptcy. The property will eventually end up under government control, and the super fund will continue to benefit a company that has a track record of donating to specific politicians campaign funds.
If you really want to understand why businesses are going out of business in this country, all you have to do is follow the money.
Scott
At the heart of science is an essential balance between two seemingly contradictory attitudes--an openness to new ideas, no matter how bizarre or counterintuitive they may be, and the most ruthless skeptical scrutiny of all ideas, old and new. This is how deep truths are winnowed from deep nonsense. -- Carl Sagan
[QUOTE=NobleMetalWorks;157322.... all you have to do is follow the money. Scott[/QUOTE]
That's the first thing I do with any issue ... particularly if politics is involved. Like a business commentator on Fox Business says "Even when they say it isn't, it's ALWAYS about the money".
This was bs. Yes they lost $$ when lead blew .80 cents and trades sideways for a yesr.
It all turned out okay.
Excide jci eastern penn rat just a new smelters around here. Never mind USA owned ones in mexico and new alta in montreal.
These places have to provide all the battery lead for every application. All starting lighting and ignition batts. All deep cycle battery back up erc.
Yes china and vietnam make a lot of agm and gel batts. Ever wonder why when all thr flooded ones are made here.
Agm gel batts are a rip off and provide. Little benefit for thr three times more cost.
If your in thr medical field the benefit of being alive is worth thr cost of agm gel batts.
In all other segments lead acid is thr leader and 100 years old tech that hasn't changed. I mean high current batterie. Not little cell or rc car batts.
Also the lead acid battery is a recycling success story. 98 percent of new batteries made come back to be smelted.
That's from bci. Not the manufactures.
I love batteries.
Aaron.
Mick your selling to excide now right. They prolly pay you in the spot now though. Lol.
Yes it scared a lot of their customers.
Why else would excide start paying cash.
Oh to compete with ...............swr......... Lol.
We are killing them at their own game.
When jci and excide stop worrying about selling new batts and worry about scrap batts. I'll let them buy me out or buy into them.
At that point you will have to do either or or be a guy selling hamburgers from ur truck near a bbk or mcd. Lol
Aaron.
Co e you guys. Where's thr open exchange of info. We are the ones with our boots on the ground trying to stay off thr system.
These corarate giants are getting all the breaks.
Let's change our country. In turn change our lives and all we know.
Where is the future section of this great fourm. I love this place but people are saying I talk to much. What don't like the truth.
I want educated customers. I want a guy to know grading so when he comes in with an am cat he knows it 5 bucks not 20o dollars.
Or saw lme copper at 340 and thinks that's what thr prices are. Educate. Someone tought you right.
Aaron.
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