Sea Containers

For shipping containers, see containerization.
Sea Containers Ltd
Industry Passenger transport
Leisure
Marine container leasing
Founded 1965
Headquarters Hamilton Bermuda
London United Kingdom
Key people
Robert MacKenzie (CEO & President)
James B. Sherwood (Chairman)

Sea Containers Ltd. was a Bermuda-registered company which operated two main business areas: transport and container leasing. The company filed for bankruptcy on 16 October 2006. In 2009 its maritime container interests were transferred to a new company SeaCo Ltd, with the winding down and liquidation of the remainder of the group continuing.[1]

History

Yale University graduate and retired United States Navy officer James Sherwood founded Sea Containers in 1965, with initial capital of $100,000.[2] Over 40 years, Sherwood expanded Sea Containers from a supplier of leased cargo containers, into various shipping companies, as well as expanding the company into luxury hotels and railway trains, including the Venice-Simplon Orient Express and the Great North Eastern Railway franchise from London to Edinburgh.

Although valued with a net worth of £60million in the 2004 Sunday Times Rich List,[3] as Sea Containers hit financial troubles, he resigned from each of his companies in 2006.

In March 2006 the company sold its share of Orient-Express Hotels.

Chapter 11

In March 2006, Sherwood resigned from all positions in the various Sea Containers Companies. Sherwood was replaced by company doctor Bob MacKenzie, while Ian Durant became senior vice-president of finance.

Despite selling various businesses and asets, Sea Containers announced in early October 2006 that it was unlikely to be able to pay a $115m (£62m) bond due up on 15 October. On 16 October, the company filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection. The documents revealed that Sea Containers has paid Sherwood $500k, MacKenzie just under £1.4m, and Durant £1.1m.[4]

On 6 November 2006 the UK Pensions regulator wrote to Sea Containers that it must pay £143m to its two UK pension schemes if it wants to wind them up.[5]

On 11 February 2009, its maritime container interests were transferred to a new company SeaCo Ltd, with the wind down and liquidation of the remainder of the group continuing. The major shareholders in the new company were the former Sea Containers Ltd bondholders and two of the group's UK pension funds.[1]

Former subsidiaries

Transport

Ferry services

On March 24, 2006 Sea Containers announced its intention to withdraw from the ferry business. These were:

The following businesses have already been discontinued:

Other

Related activities include:

Rail

Containers

Sea Containers container leasing business was conducted mainly through GE SeaCo, a joint venture with GE Capital formed in 1998. GE SeaCo was sold to HNA Group of China for approximately $1 billion on December 15, 2011 and now operates as Seaco.

Other former activities

Footnotes

  1. 1 2 "Sea Containers Implements Plan of Reorganisation". 2009-02-12. Retrieved 2012-02-17.
  2. "Sea Containers Ltd. - Company History". Funding Universe. Retrieved 31 March 2009.
  3. "Sunday Times - Rich List". The Times. Retrieved 31 March 2009.
  4. Dominic O’Connell (31 December 2006). "Sea Containers paid bosses £1m". The Times. Retrieved 31 March 2009.
  5. "Pension threat to Sea Containers". BBC News. 6 November 2006. Retrieved 31 March 2009.
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