Very, very unlikely. They went into compulsory liquidation, not an administration. This means that they’ve ceased trading entirely. It’s just possible that small parts of the business may be bought, but even that’s unlikely - a purchaser would have to move very swiftly (within about 24-48 hours); any UK employees of those parts of the business would be TUPEd over.
Any hedge fund who had a credit default swap position (I don’t know if there are any) will now do very nicely out of the liquidation. So that’s alright then.
Yes, I recognised the need to move at lightning speed but I'm not familiar with compulsory liquidation and administration (the former locks doors and the latter stumbles along until a buyer found?)
It's a pity though ... the creditors will now get the forced sale market value of assets which I'm confident is a number lower than what it would be attractive to a potential buyer of the going concern.
All supposition obviously but without the burden of massive debt and interest payments, the opportunity to switch in/out management, streamline and dispose then I'm sure this is a business which has great potential. The fact that they were still paying themselves tidy bonuses and even paying Divi's up until 7 or 8 months ago is a sure sign of much that was wrong