Citing difficulties with diminishing sales and escalating competition, Tupperware Brands Corp. filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy.
Tupperware Brands Corp. struggled for years with declining sales and increasing competition before declaring bankruptcy.
The kitchenware company, which ruled the food storage industry for decades, has been warning of doubts about its ability to stay in business since 2020. It intended to close its sole US factory and lay off nearly 150 workers as of June of this year.
Following months of discussions between Tupperware and its lenders regarding how to handle more than $700 million in loans, the company filed for bankruptcy in Delaware. The company kept failing despite the creditors’ agreement to give it some leeway over that debt.
Earl Tupper, the company’s founder, first presented plastic goods to the public in 1946 and later filed a patent for the products’ flexible, airtight seal. Later, the brand’s products began to flood American homes, mostly through independent sales parties held in suburban homes.
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