Pittsburgh Brewing Is Dying!

Pittsburgh Brewing says liabilities nearly double assets Thursday, January 12, 2006

By Len Boselovic, Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Bankrupt Pittsburgh Brewing yesterday filed financial statements indicating it has assets of $7.5 million against liabilities of $13.2 million.

The Lawrenceville brewer said it lost $846,00 in the first eight months of last year, indicating that the company's financial position has deteriorated over the last year.

Pittsburgh Brewing's liabilities include $6.5 million owed to secured creditors, including President Joseph Piccirilli, and $6.7 million owed to unsecured creditors.

Not listed in the filing is the Pension Benefit Guaranty Corp., which will likely have to take over a brewery pension fund saddled with more than a $6 million deficit.

When the company last year asked the PBGC for permission to terminate the pension plan, it said it had posted operating losses of $1.2 million over the previous three years.

The 20 largest unsecured creditors are owed $5.1 million. They include the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms, Pittsburgh Steelers Sports, the U.S. Treasury, a union pension fund, Highmark, the UPMC Health Plan and suppliers.

Pittsburgh Brewing filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection Dec. 7 after the Pittsburgh Water and Sewer Authority threatened to terminate service over $2.5 million in unpaid bills, some of them dating back to 1996.

The filing indicates Mr. Piccirilli is paid an annual salary of $112,000 and owns 44 percent of the company's stock. The next largest shareholder listed is Chicago investor Jack Cerone, who owns 20 percent.

Mr. Cercone is the brewery's largest secured creditor, with a claim of $6 million. Mr. Piccirilli has a secured claim of $375,000 from a loan he made to the company.

-------------------------------------------------------------------------------- (Len Boselovic can be reached at snipped-for-privacy@post-gazette.com or 412-263-1941.)

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Reply to
Garrison Hilliard
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This is what happens when you try to sell crap. Not only would most of the so called beer experts in this NG say it's crap, most regular beer drinkers don't like it either.

Reply to
Pfeister

Yep. Look at what a shitty business situation AB, Miller and Coors find themselves in.

Not to mention, breweries that sell really good beer never, ever go out of business.

Breweries fail for exactly the same reasons other businesses fail, and the quality of the beer rarely, if ever, has anything to do with it. It comes down to failure to find a market, and failing to spend in accord with what you can bring in. And for businesses other than beer, the quality of the product has little to do with either of those things.

-Steve

Reply to
Steve Jackson

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more layoffs as with everywhere else.

Reply to
Foundryrat

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