Bankruptcy

Overview

Enron. WeWork. Lehman Brothers. Bed Bath & Beyond. These famous corporate failures represent some of the nearly 500,000 bankruptcy filings that happen each year in the United States.

1440 Findings

Hours of research by our editors, distilled into minutes of clarity.

  • Every year, nearly 500,000 bankruptcies are filed in the US

    From personal hardships to major corporate collapses like Enron and Bed Bath & Beyond, filing for bankruptcy isn't a quick fix or a “get-out-of-jail-free” card—it’s a complex, structured process offering debt relief or repayment options.

  • Tom Petty used bankruptcy to change the music industry

    In order to resolve a dispute over how a label was treating him as an artist, he self-produced an album and racked up $500K in debt. The resulting bankruptcy filing allowed him to start a new contract with the label on more favorable terms.

  • The Failure Museum is a curated collection of over 1,000 items representing failed products and companies

    Sean Jacobsohn, a tech investor and founder of the Failure Museum, uses items from failed businesses to explain the six primary forces behind their flops, from a Theranos mug to a Blockbuster membership card.

  • Investment banking giant Lehman Brothers filed for bankruptcy in September 2008 when it had $619B in debt, making it the largest bankruptcy ever in the US

    Nearly all of its 26,000 employees immediately lost their jobs. But in London, a few hundred remained tucked away, working for another decade to wind down the bank’s European business.

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