U.S. Bankruptcy Court Approves LTV's Sale of VP Buildings to Grupo IMSA
U.S. Bankruptcy Court Approves LTV's Sale of VP Buildings to Grupo IMSA
CLEVELAND, Sept. 4 The LTV Corporation (OTC Bulletin Board: LTVCQ) today announced that the U.S. Bankruptcy Court has approved the proposed sale of VP Buildings to Grupo IMSA SA deCV. The sale includes all of the assets of VP Buildings, Inc. and certain related VP Buildings subsidiaries. VP Buildings, an LTV subsidiary, is the nation's second largest manufacturer of pre-engineered steel buildings for low-rise commercial applications. It operates 11 facilities in North America and has an interest in three joint venture plants in Latin America. Revenues for 2000 were approximately $400 million. The company employs about 2,300 people in the United States. The purchase price was $102 million plus the assumption of certain liabilities. "The sale of VP Buildings will provide LTV with additional financial resources and is an important step in our restructuring effort," said John D. Turner, executive vice president and chief operating officer. The LTV Corporation is currently operating under protection of Chapter 11 of the U.S. Bankruptcy Code. The parties will close the transaction as soon as possible after receiving regulatory approvals. The LTV Corporation is a manufacturing company with interests in steel and metal fabrication. LTV's Integrated Steel segment is a leading producer of high-quality, value-added flat rolled steel, and a major supplier to the transportation, appliance, electrical equipment and service center industries. LTV's Metal Fabrication segment consists of LTV Copperweld, the largest producer of tubular and bimetallic products in North America. This press release includes forward-looking statements. Our uses of the words "outlook," "anticipates," "believes," "estimate," "expect" and similar words are intended to identify these statements as forward-looking. These statements represent our current judgement on what the future holds. While the Company believes them to be reasonable, a number of important factors could cause actual results to differ materially from those projected. These factors include relatively small changes in market price or market demand; changes in domestic capacity; changes in raw material costs; increased operating costs; loss of business from major customers, especially for high value-added product; availability of post petition financing; negative market and credit impact from the Chapter 11 filing; unanticipated expenses; substantial changes in financial markets; labor unrest; unfair foreign competition; major equipment failure; unanticipated results in pending legal proceedings; difficulties in implementing information technology; and other factors.
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