One of Chile’s leading fruit exporters, Exportadora Santa Cruz, has filed for bankruptcy with debts of around US$55bn, Eurofruit reported. It follows a second failed reorganization process embarked on by the company in less than a year, prompting creditors to request forced liquidation due to noncompliance with the reorganisation plan. The 1st Civil Court of Santiago declared bankruptcy on 18 March and scheduled a hearing for 30 April to finalize the voting rights process and the constitutive creditors’ meeting.
Chile, by far the biggest shipper of copper into the U.S., is waiting for details to emerge following President’s Donald Trump’s bombshell comments on tariffs, Bloomberg reported. Trump sent shock-waves through the global copper industry on Tuesday by telling reporters that he would be slapping a 50% levy on copper imports — about double what the market was pricing in. Chile — and particularly state-owned Codelco — would be the most affected producer given the country accounts for about 500,000 metric tons of the total of 700,000 tons of refined metal the US imports a year.
Chile’s WOM won court approval to exit bankruptcy proceedings after it agreed to a takeover and restructuring bid from a group of creditors, eight months after filing for chapter 11, Bloomberg News reported. A U.S. bankruptcy judge rejected an objection to the takeover bid by a rival group of creditors, according to a statement from the company. The offer represented the only viable option for WOM to exit chapter 11 proceedings, the tribunal said.