Inheritance debt bankruptcy and

Let's fight back against student loan debt servitude

2014.09.14 12:21 daiyuesen Let's fight back against student loan debt servitude

Student Loans Defaulters
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2014.04.10 21:31 RicFeinberg Debt Relief Legal Group

Welcome to the Debt Relief Legal Group LLC website. We are one of the largest filers of bankruptcy cases in the state of Florida and have handled thousands of cases filed under chapter 7, 11 and 13 of the Bankruptcy Code. My name is Richard B. Feinberg Esq., and I am the managing partner of Debt Relief Legal Group.
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2012.01.02 17:31 groceryalerts Personal Finance For Canadians

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2024.05.14 21:59 Realistic_Scene_3578 Alright I need everyone’s opinion

I am 24, and obviously have messed up financially.
72k in debt, 14K vehicle(0.9% APR), 25K credit cards(30% APR), 33k Personal loans (14% APR)
My income is $5800 a month, I get paid once a month, feel like I’m drowning.
I have zero rent / mortgage, don’t own anything.
45K in a 401k that I can’t pull out due to my employers rules.
Do I file bankruptcy?
submitted by Realistic_Scene_3578 to Bankruptcy [link] [comments]


2024.05.14 20:56 Traditional_Duck8430 Inheritance Question

Hello,
I have a question regarding inheritance law. My biological father is German. I have only met this person a couple of times as a child but have not seen him in about 25 years. I live in America and have dual citizenship. My mother is German.
Apparently, he passed away 6 months ago. I found out about this about 3 months ago by accident, nobody made me aware of it. I reached out to a distant relative to confirm it and at that time provided my address as they said they might need it while dealing with this matter. I wasn't expecting an inheritance since I didn't know this man.
Yesterday, one of his siblings reached out and said that I should be getting a letter from the courts with an offer of an inheritance. She said to decline it as he had a mountain of debt. From what I had heard from my mother, that sounds about right, so I was not surprised. However, it seems everyone else in that family has already received letters and declined and I am the only one who has not. I am getting very nervous as I do not want to get stuck with the debt of a stranger. I see online there is a deadline of how long you have to decline. 6 weeks./6 months depending on if you are overseas or not. Is this from the time of death? Or the time of receipt of the letter from the court? Is there any way I can preemptively decline in case the letter was lost?
I do not care about any inheritance, even if there was money, I just would rather not deal with this at all but since I have to, are there forms I can fill out right now and send to this court?
any help is appreciated.
submitted by Traditional_Duck8430 to germany [link] [comments]


2024.05.14 20:49 ATTA_1 22k Inheritance - RESP or TFSA or?

Daily Reddit lurker and very occasional poster.
I am about to inherit 22k and unsure what to do with it- put it in my TFSA or in my child's RESP?
I have TFSA, 27k in GIC and 24k invested ($52000k total which includes an emergency fund, and my contribution limit is $95k).
Have 20k in my 6 y/o child's RESP invested in a managed robo portfolio. Have thought about opening a questrade RESP and just buying an equity ETF. Currently contribute $300 monthly.
Live in GTA and home ownership doesn't seem feasible these days.
Have 7k in student loans and I have been throwing $600/month at that for a while (I know I can pay less but it was psychologically weighing me.down before! Now not as much)
fixed rate car loan at $389/month for another 15 months.
Have $60k is rsp/rrsp. Spouse has no savings (don't get me started!!!).
Household income is about 115 k (me) and 60-70k (spouse) this year, but can fluctuate depending on my spouse's work. No credit debt.
I opened a managed FHSA with WS but haven't contributed anything yet as I'm unsure if that's the best account for me.
I try to save 1k/month in TFSA or RRSP, but this depends on expenses.
So, Reddit, what would be the most effective use of 22k in my scenario?
submitted by ATTA_1 to PersonalFinanceCanada [link] [comments]


2024.05.14 20:34 JeremyUsbourneWebb Should I use a credit card to pay for car repairs before bankruptcy?

I’ve previously asked for advice on here and bankruptcy is the best option for me. I’ve spoken to debt advice charities who have also advised the same. So in that sense I have acknowledged my debt with the charities in April
Because of how strongly it’s going to f me in the a, with also having to pay into bankruptcy for 3 years with any spare money left at the end of the month I know that once I bankrupt myself I won’t be able to afford the repairs on my car which I do need
I have read that you can be rejected if you purposely make your debt worse, or if you’ve been wreckless they can place restrictions on you
So with that in mind should I avoid £800 on car repairs or should I take the chance whilst I have it? Some of them are safety critical, like the brake hose and brake discs both needing urgent replacement
submitted by JeremyUsbourneWebb to LegalAdviceUK [link] [comments]


2024.05.14 20:09 Puzzleheaded-Love795 No cash, big debt

Some context: I started a crypto mining business at the end of 2021. In the beginning, I sold crypto miners and various electrical equipment to those who wanted to mine bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies. Obviously, the sales stopped coming in once crypto prices plummeted and by the end of 2022, I was stuck with a bunch of miners that were a tenth of the price they once were. Unable to pay my debts with business cash, I decided to start paying with my personal money ever since. I still have around $20k in debt, but I can’t keep paying with my personal finances.
I know I should not have been doing this as I filed as an LLC, but I didn’t know what else to do at the time and was scared of bankruptcy. To make things even worse, I moved states so I’m not even in the same state that the LLC was filed. I don’t even know who to contact to get information about bankruptcy or debt management. I just want to be done with my business. Is there any hope for me to get out of this? Since I’ve been paying the debt with my own personal finances, am I now personally liable for the debt? I’m in a tight spot financially and cannot afford to keep paying off my business debt. Any help is welcome.
For now, I’ll just be over here crying in my corner.
submitted by Puzzleheaded-Love795 to smallbusiness [link] [comments]


2024.05.14 19:48 T1DPilotguy Unique situation

So as the title says, I am in a bit of a pickle with the amount of debt that I have, but I feel like it is a bit more uncommon than most situations and I am wondering what my options are.
So I went to school to become a pilot and partway through I was diagnosed with type one diabetes, which is an automatic disqualify which is an automatic disqualifier for an FAA commercial for an FAA commercial medical. However, you can jump through a bunch of hoops in hopes to get a special issuance medical certificate.
So I elected to continue my training all the way through a multi engine commercial certificate and partway through my certified flight instructor license before I decided that my health wasn’t going to be good enough to meet standards for a special issuance medical and I changed majors. However, I racked up $180,000 in debt; 140k in private and 40k in government loans.
Currently, I’m using the snowball method to tackle this, but my payments are roughly $1600/mo wondering if there’s any way to help relieve this. I was able to get on the save program for my government loan so I only paid $50 a month for that. I also don’t want to consolidate my loans because my interest rates vary between 3% and 4.6%.
Any advice or programs that I could apply for to help eliminate some of this debt? Is it also possible work around way to apply for bankruptcy? could I potentially sue my school to get some of that money back?
submitted by T1DPilotguy to debtfree [link] [comments]


2024.05.14 19:48 ClasherMatt2000 How do I even start repairing this?

Hi there. I am 23 years old, and just got discharged from a first bankruptcy. I had no choice but to declare bankruptcy last year because I had $14,000 in credit debt and was only working a very part time minimum wage job while in university. Yes I made bad decisions that led to this. I am ready to fix it though. I got discharged with my official certificate May 2nd.
First off, I have only $1500 to my name right now. Very few expenses though as I live with my mom and she said I don't have to pay rent until I graduate from university in one more year. In addition, I will be working for 6 days a week much of this summer. I am hoping to save up some money.
Even though I do not have to pay rent, I want to help my mom with some money if I can later in the summer, because she helped me before when I was in need.
So essentially, where do I start fixing my situation?
And how do I get the bankruptcy marked as resolved on my credit report? So that I can start rebuilding. I know it lasts for 7 years but I was told equifax can mark it as resolved or something like that.
I'm ready to fix this, and don't ever want to repeat the same mistakes. I have one credit card now with only a $300 limit from capital one.
Do I just save as much as humanly possible from my summer job? Because when uni starts on the fall again, I'll have less work.
submitted by ClasherMatt2000 to PersonalFinanceCanada [link] [comments]


2024.05.14 19:45 wlady4000 Why us so had to save money and achieve financial freedom and how to overcome it

Saving money and achieving financial freedom can indeed be challenging due to various factors, but understanding these hurdles and implementing strategies to overcome them can pave the way towards financial success.
  1. Lack of Financial Literacy: Many people struggle with managing their finances simply because they lack the necessary knowledge about budgeting, investing, and saving. Without a solid understanding of financial principles, it's easy to fall into patterns of overspending and debt. Overcoming: Educate yourself about personal finance through books, online resources, or even financial literacy courses. Understanding basic concepts like budgeting, compound interest, and investment strategies can empower you to make informed decisions about your money.
  2. Living Beyond Means: In today's consumer-driven culture, there's often pressure to keep up with the latest trends and maintain a certain lifestyle, even if it means spending more than you earn. This mentality leads to excessive spending and makes it difficult to save. Overcoming: Practice living below your means by creating a budget that prioritizes saving and investing over unnecessary expenses. Differentiate between needs and wants, and be mindful of your spending habits. Focus on long-term financial goals rather than short-term gratification.
  3. High Cost of Living: Rising expenses such as housing, healthcare, and education can eat into your income, leaving little room for saving and investing. Overcoming: Explore ways to reduce your living expenses, such as downsizing to a smaller home, renegotiating bills, or finding cheaper alternatives for necessities. Consider relocating to areas with lower costs of living if feasible. Additionally, look for ways to increase your income through side hustles or advancing your career.
  4. Debt Burden: Debt, especially high-interest consumer debt like credit card balances, can significantly impede your ability to save and invest for the future. Paying off debt often takes precedence over saving, leading to a cycle of financial stress. Overcoming: Prioritize debt repayment by adopting strategies like the debt snowball or debt avalanche method. Cut discretionary spending and allocate the savings towards paying off debt faster. Consider consolidating high-interest debt or negotiating with creditors for lower interest rates.
  5. Lack of Discipline: Saving money requires discipline and self-control, which can be challenging in a world filled with temptations and instant gratification. Impulse purchases and lifestyle inflation can derail your savings goals. Overcoming: Develop good financial habits by automating your savings and investments, setting up separate accounts for different financial goals, and tracking your spending regularly. Create barriers to impulse spending, such as implementing a waiting period before making non-essential purchases. Surround yourself with supportive friends and family who share similar financial goals.
  6. Unexpected Expenses and Emergencies: Financial setbacks like medical emergencies, car repairs, or job loss can derail your savings progress and force you to dip into your savings or accumulate debt. Overcoming: Build an emergency fund to cover 3-6 months' worth of living expenses, so you're prepared for unforeseen circumstances. Make regular contributions to this fund until you reach your target amount. Consider purchasing insurance policies like health insurance, car insurance, and disability insurance to mitigate the financial impact of unexpected events.
  7. Psychological Barriers: Deep-seated beliefs and emotions about money inherited from childhood or past experiences can influence your financial behavior. Fear of failure, scarcity mindset, or feelings of unworthiness can sabotage your efforts to save and invest. Overcoming: Practice mindfulness and self-awareness to identify and challenge limiting beliefs about money. Cultivate a positive money mindset by focusing on abundance rather than scarcity. Surround yourself with positive influences and seek support from a financial advisor or therapist if necessary.
By addressing these challenges with proactive strategies and a mindset geared towards long-term financial success, you can overcome obstacles to saving money and ultimately achieve financial freedom. Remember that it's a journey, and progress may come in small steps, but every step forward brings you closer to your goals.
submitted by wlady4000 to u/wlady4000 [link] [comments]


2024.05.14 19:02 Money_Spider420 Free and easy £25 in 5 steps Another free £25 for every referral you make Vanquis card

Vanquis is a credit card company aiming to help people from all financial backgrounds improve their credit score and fine tune their financial skills.
Just like any other credit card, as long as you pay off any and all debts before the end of the month, you won’t be losing out on money due to late fees or interest, if anything you will actually be building your credit score this way.
The great thing about Vanquis is that they are currently giving away a no-strings attached £25 for free just for signing up!!!

Step by step guide;

  1. Sign up using this referral link > https://www.vanquis.co.uk/raf-app?code=BC5D0B06FD6905F0FA6E
  2. Wait for the card to arrive (takes about 3 working days on average).
  3. Activate the card on the Vanquis app
  4. Make a transaction of £1 or more (I just topped up my Amazon account by £1 for this but you can also just buy something in any shop (with a value of atleast £1).
  5. Receive £25 credit on your card to spend (£1 of this will be used to cover the £1 transaction you made in step 4).
  6. Refer friends for an extra £25 credit for each friend that successfully completed the steps I have outlined for you above :)
You should receive your completely free £25 within a couple of days, however the terms do state it can take up to 45 days so don’t be worried if it takes a couple of days for your bonus to be applied to your account :).
NOTE: I do not recommend using this card on ATMs as there is an ATM fee when withdrawing money from one using a Vanquis card, but normal card use has no fees :)
Screenshot of the offer: https://imgur.com/a/wBkKRVn
I recently referred a friend that declared bankruptcy last year and they were still eligible for a Vanquis card and a free £25!

Free £25 link

Non ref link
submitted by Money_Spider420 to beermoneyuk [link] [comments]


2024.05.14 18:37 ImmediateRatio813 How do I pay off my CC debt?

25 years old 16k in charged off CC debt across 5 cards
7.7k on Amex platinum 2.9k on chase (I’m on a payment plan for this and only paying 700) 2k on capitol one 1200 on apple 2200 on amazon
My debt built up when I got injured at work 4 years ago and wasn’t making as much while on workers comp and over the past year of job searching. When I was still getting some pay I kept them all in the preferred utilization percentage but still racked up a lot when that ended cause I still need health insurance.
Because of my injury I have limitations that make physical jobs not possible. I am in college (junior) for software engineering but landing an internship thru that has also been difficult.
So what do I do? Do I declare bankruptcy? I wouldn’t mind getting a loan and using my car as collateral but I won’t get approved because I have no income cause this job market is insane.
submitted by ImmediateRatio813 to personalfinance [link] [comments]


2024.05.14 18:28 SeaLand9 On our way to file Chapter 13

Hello! My husband and myself are nearing the point where we have got to file for bankruptcy or I will end up insane trying to stay on top of our consumer debt.
We filed Chapter 7 in 2018 so we have two more years we'd have to wait, and that's if we would even qualify. Therefore Chapter 13 is on the horizon.
Here is what we are working with. If I'm leaving something out, please ask and I will do my best to answer.
Combined income: 102K -80K after taxes. In addition my husband received 644 a month on VA Disability.
I am paying roughly $2100 monthly on 35K in unsecured debt (cc, personal loans, payday loans )
Our secured debt is our Mortgage. Market Value is 356K with 19K equity. Mortgage payment: 2469.00 We also have a note on both our vehicles which hits a little under 1K each month.
When someone says that are paying 100% does that mean they are paying back everything they owe? Is there even the possibility of paying less than?
How does the Trustee calculate the time frame of the repayment whether it be 5 years or 3 years? Are we making the right choice going to Chapter 13? I have consulted with an attorney, I have stopped paying our creditors so I can pay the retainer fee.
Will we be in any better shape monthly? I understand all disposable income will go to creditors however is it possible to pay the trustee less than we are paying to our Creditors?
I did not include utilities, insurance, phone in these numbers.
Thanks! Sorry if this is long and winded.
submitted by SeaLand9 to Bankruptcy [link] [comments]


2024.05.14 17:39 PitifulHoneydew7302 21M, 6 figure income(pre-tax), 70k+ in debt

Hey folks, I (21M) posted a little while ago asking for information and advice on how to assess my debt a little more realistically. I spent most of my life extremely poor and had nothing. I was raised on the value that if you want something go and get it bc nobody is gonna hand it to you. For this reason I think I got carried away in life. Bit off more than I can chew per se. I’ve come to the realization that I can easily pay off the debt I’m in with some determination and discipline. My main struggle is my living situation. For context I am a traveling renewable energy technician. I spent the first 3 years of my career all over the country and just recently over the past 6 months decided to plant some roots where I am now in AZ/CA border. I currently live in a 30ft travel trailer. It’s not “ideal” but I bought it brand new a little over a year ago because I was tired of paying rent endlessly throwing away my paychecks, however, I realize now that what I’m doing isn’t much different. I still owe 28k on a 40k trailer and it only appraises for 15-18k. I’m tired of it and want to move into a home or room with one of my coworkers but due to the high DTI I have at this time I don’t think I could reasonably afford that. I have $7500 in CC, $11,000 in unsecured personal loan, $20,000 in auto loan, and $28,000 for my Travel trailer loan. I have a BASE salary of $77,500/ year. I do have some kickers (bonuses and weekend pay available) which bring my total gross income to well over 100k a year. My question is this, if you were in my shoes what kind of advice would you have for me? Is there a way that I can default on some of this debt? Settle? I want to start over… but I don’t think that Bankruptcy is an option due to my income. I want to invest my money and have something to show for the money I make but all of my assets at this time are depreciating.
Any help or guidance is well appreciated. Thanks in advance guys.
submitted by PitifulHoneydew7302 to Money [link] [comments]


2024.05.14 16:51 Direct-Ad2644 ending my life tonight

Please don't judge me or be harsh or trolling. I can't handle it at this point in time right now.... I am just moments close to ending everything because I just can't handle it anymore. please if you judge me just keep it to yourself please..
I am on ssi and ssd getting 158 on the first and 805 on the 3rd. the ssd is after both my parents passed they put me on my dads disability drawing off what he earned working but I was originally on ssi to begin with.
I get about 963 a month total to live on. Right now I am in major debt with credit cards since covid broke out. I had to use them to live on.
I moved in with my aunt who is living in apartments based on income but they are not section 8 but they accept section 8. When i moved in, i was told by the manager i didn't need to put my income since i was a cotenant. that was 10 yrs ago. come to find out. i had to put my income now i am being sued by the housing authority for 10k, i owe two more years. my aunt and i pay 220 a month to them. they don't care what happened they just want their money.
i owe one credit card company 4.5k, another 1.8k another 600 and another 700. when i applied for them, it was 3 plus years ago. i put that i made around 700k a year when i applied to them but i was on ssdi at the time making around 11k a year. i went on the websites 3 months ago fixed the right info.
I live in a small town where nothing is available for the next 20 plus miles and have no transport. my aunt won't take me anywhere. her son who si in his late 30's lives with us and works. my aunt is on disability. I get food stamps right now worth a 130 a month which goes to my aunt even though its for me. i pay her 450 a month rent incl internet lights and 130 in food. if i don't give her the food stamps then i have to pay her another 130 a month i can't afford since all my stuff is going to her and credit cards. i legit have nothing left each month right now with having to buy myself instant mashed potatoes, oatmeal top ramen soup, noodles and spaghetti sauce. i live on that through the month.
when she buys food with the food stamps it feeds her son, me and her. but it is only enough to last a week, then for the next 3 weeks i am starving barely eating because i can't afford much when i do buy stuff that i can put in my bedroom to eat on.
past week now, there has been no food, her son has been taking his mom and him out to eat all week not bringing anything home for me. im so hungry. the nearest food bank is 4 miles away one way, but i have no way to get there my aunt won't take me they don't deliver and when i tried getting medicaid transport to take me they said they don't schedule rides except to and from the dr's.
I have no other family, I have no friends. I have no vehicle. been trying to get a minivan so I could live in it. I am sometimes bed ridden due to my bad joints/back/knees/feet/right leg nerve damage. I also struggle from morbid obesity I am around 500 lbs and funny thing is, with how little i eat. i should be losing weight but its the complete opposite.
I will be 47 yrs old when I am out of debt with the credit card companies, I tried filing bankruptcy no one will touch me being under 10k in debt with the credit card companies. i contacted legal aid, the attorney who called me back said he can't help me because its under 10k. but told me how to file but chances of me filing and getting it are slim to none esp without legal help he said.
im thinking of ending my life next month when my aunt and her son leave for a week. I just can't keep living like this. if i had a minivan I could stay in it, do door dash for extra money, I could get around trying to find an aparment based on income. I bene accepted a few times to low income places but had no way to get there and now with all the debt I wouldn't be able to afford having my own place with the credit card debt.
if i stop paying the cards, and the debt collectors come after me, they could take me to court and if they do, they could show the judge i said i made 700k a year and i didn't make that much and was on disability at the time and making only 11k a year. i found out while looking into bankruptcy that it is fraud and i could face prison time.
i just don't know what to do anymore. i really don't know what to do anymore other than ending things next month to get out of this situation i put myself in with my aunt, debt, etc. I just can't do it anymore esp without a vehicle. esp since I am bed ridden half of the day here and there due to my bad joints and weight that i have carried around for 30 yrs destroying my joints and causing nerve damage to my right leg. I can't just get up and go on the streets and live on the streets not with how badly im in pain every day esp just walking to the corner store. just a simple walk to the corner store and back and i am bed rested for an entire day barely able to move.
i can't do it anymore...
submitted by Direct-Ad2644 to SuicideWatch [link] [comments]


2024.05.14 16:50 Direct-Ad2644 Ending my life tonight

Please don't judge me or be harsh or trolling. I can't handle it at this point in time right now.... I am just moments close to ending everything because I just can't handle it anymore. please if you judge me just keep it to yourself please..
I am on ssi and ssd getting 158 on the first and 805 on the 3rd. the ssd is after both my parents passed they put me on my dads disability drawing off what he earned working but I was originally on ssi to begin with.
I get about 963 a month total to live on. Right now I am in major debt with credit cards since covid broke out. I had to use them to live on.
I moved in with my aunt who is living in apartments based on income but they are not section 8 but they accept section 8. When i moved in, i was told by the manager i didn't need to put my income since i was a cotenant. that was 10 yrs ago. come to find out. i had to put my income now i am being sued by the housing authority for 10k, i owe two more years. my aunt and i pay 220 a month to them. they don't care what happened they just want their money.
i owe one credit card company 4.5k, another 1.8k another 600 and another 700. when i applied for them, it was 3 plus years ago. i put that i made around 700k a year when i applied to them but i was on ssdi at the time making around 11k a year. i went on the websites 3 months ago fixed the right info.
I live in a small town where nothing is available for the next 20 plus miles and have no transport. my aunt won't take me anywhere. her son who si in his late 30's lives with us and works. my aunt is on disability. I get food stamps right now worth a 130 a month which goes to my aunt even though its for me. i pay her 450 a month rent incl internet lights and 130 in food. if i don't give her the food stamps then i have to pay her another 130 a month i can't afford since all my stuff is going to her and credit cards. i legit have nothing left each month right now with having to buy myself instant mashed potatoes, oatmeal top ramen soup, noodles and spaghetti sauce. i live on that through the month.
when she buys food with the food stamps it feeds her son, me and her. but it is only enough to last a week, then for the next 3 weeks i am starving barely eating because i can't afford much when i do buy stuff that i can put in my bedroom to eat on.
past week now, there has been no food, her son has been taking his mom and him out to eat all week not bringing anything home for me. im so hungry. the nearest food bank is 4 miles away one way, but i have no way to get there my aunt won't take me they don't deliver and when i tried getting medicaid transport to take me they said they don't schedule rides except to and from the dr's.
I have no other family, I have no friends. I have no vehicle. been trying to get a minivan so I could live in it. I am sometimes bed ridden due to my bad joints/back/knees/feet/right leg nerve damage. I also struggle from morbid obesity I am around 500 lbs and funny thing is, with how little i eat. i should be losing weight but its the complete opposite.
I will be 47 yrs old when I am out of debt with the credit card companies, I tried filing bankruptcy no one will touch me being under 10k in debt with the credit card companies. i contacted legal aid, the attorney who called me back said he can't help me because its under 10k. but told me how to file but chances of me filing and getting it are slim to none esp without legal help he said.
im thinking of ending my life next month when my aunt and her son leave for a week. I just can't keep living like this. if i had a minivan I could stay in it, do door dash for extra money, I could get around trying to find an aparment based on income. I bene accepted a few times to low income places but had no way to get there and now with all the debt I wouldn't be able to afford having my own place with the credit card debt.
if i stop paying the cards, and the debt collectors come after me, they could take me to court and if they do, they could show the judge i said i made 700k a year and i didn't make that much and was on disability at the time and making only 11k a year. i found out while looking into bankruptcy that it is fraud and i could face prison time.
i just don't know what to do anymore. i really don't know what to do anymore other than ending things next month to get out of this situation i put myself in with my aunt, debt, etc. I just can't do it anymore esp without a vehicle. esp since I am bed ridden half of the day here and there due to my bad joints and weight that i have carried around for 30 yrs destroying my joints and causing nerve damage to my right leg. I can't just get up and go on the streets and live on the streets not with how badly im in pain every day esp just walking to the corner store. just a simple walk to the corner store and back and i am bed rested for an entire day barely able to move.
i can't do it anymore...
submitted by Direct-Ad2644 to depression [link] [comments]


2024.05.14 16:49 aaroniclee Recently inherited $10K, need advice on how best to use it

Little bit of context, was in debt for most of my life but recently cleared most of it myself (just $1K in CC debt left). Dual household income, partner recently lost her job but we were collectively making $230K before that. Father recently passed away and as part of of the inheritance I just received $10K.
No TFSAs, no RRSP contributions to date. No assets, currently renting. Goal is to eventually buy a house in the city we live in (Toronto). Should I be parking this $10K into a TFSA? Should I be buying CASH.TO? Or any other investment vehicles that will help this grow steadily to save up for a downpayment?
Since I've been in debt my whole life, investing was never an option for me but now I have the opportunity to do so. Looking for advice for a newbie on how best to start with the capital I have.
submitted by aaroniclee to PersonalFinanceCanada [link] [comments]


2024.05.14 16:35 KStranger Estate Horror Story! What are our options?

Here is the situation. Location is Wales. There are 3 people that have been named executors of Person A’s estate. A step-daughter and 2 other close relations. All 3 executors are also named as the only beneficiaries in the will. The step-daughter’s daughter and her young daughter (who is under 18) moved in with Person A 6 years ago. One year later she had him put into a senior’s home but remained living in the house. The step grand-daughter is not mentioned in the will.
While Person A was still alive the step-daughter and grand-daughter were POA’s. They were investigated after Person A complained that they were spending all the money in his bank account. We don’t know what became of this because the POA would not say, although they said all withdrawals were closely monitored. The bank account which a few years ago had “6 figures” in it has been drained to almost 0. However 2 executors (not the step-daughter who was POA and now executor) are willing to look pass this if the house asset can be sorted out.
The step grand-daughter is now saying though, that she and her mother (one of the executors and also a beneficiary) are not willing to sell the house in order to raise the money necessary to pay the other 2 beneficiaries what the will says they should receive. We talked about the option of them taking ownership of the house and then getting a mortgage or line of credit but the grand-daughter said she couldn’t pay debts in the past, did something to avoid declaring bankruptcy, and as a result wouldn’t be able to get a mortgage or line of credit from the banks.
So, we are at a stalemate and the current solicitor, who we were trying to hire to represent all 3 executors, has now said he cannot be involved, that he suggests each executor either get separate representation or come to agreement on issues before he will represent all 3 of the executors. We don’t know where to turn to get advice on our best options. If we were to get a separate solicitor would their fee come out of the estate or would the executor that hired them be responsible for paying them? Any advice you can give would be appreciated. As executor it seems like we should get our own solicitor but don’t think it would be right if we had to pay for it out of our own pocket rather than the estate. As executor it’s just a horribly stressful situation as you can imagine.
submitted by KStranger to LegalAdviceUK [link] [comments]


2024.05.14 16:33 Tricky-Molasses-6192 Selling House to Pay Debt?

My husband and I have unfortunately racked up $25,000 in credit card debt in the last two years. Some of it was bad decisions or living outside our means and some of it was just bad luck and life circumstances. Regardless, it’s here now and we have to deal with it.
Personally, I think we need to sell our house to pay it off and get a lower mortgage and lower cost of living. Our mortgage went up $200 this past November because of a tax increase and I just found out our taxes are going to go up again every year for the next 5 years (that’s the plan the current board put out). We have about $150,000 of equity in our house. The only issue is that the housing market sucks so I’m not sure we’d even be able to find something less expensive that can accommodate us and I’ve heard renting is just as bad. We have three kids so I want to keep them in mind and I don’t want to just keep hauling them around moving them every few years.
My husband thinks we should do debt consolidation or bankruptcy but I said that doesn’t solve the issue that we can’t afford this house.
Is it crazy to sell? Are his options better? Is there something we’re missing?
Side note: I’ve been through our budget and even if we never eat out, cut streaming, or do anything extra, we only have about $200 extra per month and that’s paying the minimums on the cards. With random things like car repairs and medical bills popping up, it just doesn’t feel like enough to be able to pay it down.
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2024.05.14 15:45 Metha45 Where did Miyagi find that kind of money?

When Kusunoki and Miyagi chat at the station, Miyagi says that when she faced her mother's debt, her life was worth 10.000 Yen per year, and she chose to sell 30 years of her time (she says nothing about the payment she got, but it should be 300.000 Yen if you do the math.). As far as I understood, she sold her time to pay her mother's debt, so the money she'll make in these 30 years should be going to the company as a payment for the debt she inherited. But later on, we learn that Miyagi gave Kusunoki her 300.000 Yen. Now, as long as she didn't sell another 30 years, how did she find that kind of money to give to Kusunoki?
submitted by Metha45 to 3DaysOfHappiness [link] [comments]


2024.05.14 15:45 headoverheels831 Seeking advice, resource, support

I know I want out of my marriage. Been together 20 years, married 14. Two kids that are still young. I’ve been a Sahm mostly for 10 years. I’m looking to go back to work but earning potential realistically is 40-60k. Hoping to jump through the ranks quickly. We have decent equity in our home but we can not sell for 2-3 years because we had a few home insurance claims and now are uninsurable until those drop off… meaning the Home is uninsurable to any new owner as well which means they won’t be able to get a loan.
Husband recently quit his job and took a large pay cut (30k), and we are subsidizing every month with my dwindling inheritance. (3-5k)Daycare is extremely expensive which we won’t have to deal with starting in fall. Rents are high (close to what our mortgage is). I’m scared given circumstances we can’t even afford to split up and live on our own in apartments. We need the equity from the home to pay off 3 large debts he took out. If we rent our home we can’t each afford an apartment plus pay off debts. I don’t even see how he could afford alimony or child support on his current salary with cost of living. I would want 50/50 or 60/40 custody anyway.
He could live in our spare room in garage or I could but cohabitating seems so miserable. Neither of us have family or friends who can help or support beyond verbal support.
I plan to consult a divorce attorney soon, hopefully free or low cost consult. How do people do this?
submitted by headoverheels831 to Divorce [link] [comments]


2024.05.14 15:22 dankbob_memepants_ Can I live in public housing? If so, how?

I’m 22M white with no dependents or debt making only $150k annually. I have just $183k in my savings account, $440k in stocks, and $690k in bitcoin. I own a car (2024 Cybertruck) and a yacht docked at the East River. My inheritance from my grandparents will be roughly $6 million. I also own a purebred Tibetan mastiff, personal chef, and butler, so I require a pet-friendly 4-bedroom with a parking space.
How do I find out whether I qualify as a poor so I can live in public housing to save some money? It would be helpful if someone can share their experience with this.
submitted by dankbob_memepants_ to circlejerknyc [link] [comments]


2024.05.14 12:51 no_blueforyellow Advice on how to become more financially literate and handle my money better?

I was never taught financial literacy by anyone, so the only knowledge I have is pretty basic. Or it comes from Google. I clear $2k/week after taxes with no rent or mortgage as I inherited my grandparents house which i know puts me at an advantage. I know fuck all about investing, I try to learn and it just doesn’t click. So I am working on learning about Roth IRAs. Right now, aside from bills, I am just pumping money into all of my debts (I got rid of $11k in debt and have about $5k to go)
Basically what I am asking is how to divide my money. Are there any links/resources that might dumb it down to a kindergarten level for me? 😅 I have a savings, my daughter has a savings too ($100 goes into her account every week since shes been born, shes almost 3 now) What guides or resources are the best place for me to look at and start so I can make sure I make the most of my money and grow it. Also, are there any other programs aside from 529 that I could set up for my daughter that might help her? I want to set her up financially the best I possibly can. I just dont know where to begin with any of this aside from “savings account” “checking account” and “pay debts and bills”.
When I had learned about everything I had inherited I became stupid, lazy, and neglectful. But since I had my daughter I need to set myself and her up for success and I am failing miserably. Its pretty bad. :/
TIA. 🙂
edit: grammar
submitted by no_blueforyellow to personalfinance [link] [comments]


2024.05.14 12:40 Specialist_Bake6514 Vapiano P3: Italian Food Made in Germany

Vapiano P3: Italian Food Made in Germany
The kitchen is on fire. Welcome to the final part of the Vapiano story where the tables are turning. In the first two episodes we followed Mark Korzilius' journey from setbacks to founding Vapiano, a groundbreaking restaurant concept, highlighting its fresh ingredients, dynamic atmosphere, and data-driven operations that drove rapid success. While achieving initial profitability and garnering attention from industry giants like McDonald's, Vapiano's global expansion has led to stellar revenue growth. However, it has also resulted in the emergence of numerous side projects (or distractions), operational challenges, increased costs, significant investments, and a notable accumulation of debt. This underscores the prioritization of top-line growth over profitable growth. We will continue on this thread and see how the story ends, but I would encourage you to read part one and two for better context. Vapiano P1: Italian Food Made in Germany (substack.com). Let's dig in.
Before Going Public
We are now in 2015 and the year is a disaster for Vapiano's PR department. Employee time stamps are being manipulated, endless overtime for employees and high turnover in managerial roles are reported; mice in the kitchen and even rotten food allegedly found.
The company is confronted with allegations of exceeding working hours among trainees in an article published by Welt am Sonntag, while the same outlet accuses Vapiano of manipulating punch times. The auditing firm PwC is commissioned to investigate the allegations and finds that there is no systematic approach but rather misconduct by individual employees, a mistake that’s being corrected. Internal however, investigations into stamp times are carried out regularly now and beyond its obvious reputational impact, this sucks up valuable management time and attention.
In the summer of 2015 CEO, co-founder and investor Gregor Gerlach, who has been running the group since 2011 is stepping down and Jochen Halfmann is taking over. A new Vapiano People Program with an App is being developed with the aim to better interact with customers that will incorporate innovate features such as mobile pay. The German website sees a launch of new magazine to further promote the brand and there is now a full inhouse blogger and Instagram team being installed. In October the company buys seven restaurants from original co-founder, former co-investor and ex-president previously responsible for internation expansion Kent Hahne (2x Bonn, 3x Cologne, 1x Koblenz and one in Cologne that’s under construction). This package of Vapiano restaurants is very successful and generates net sales of more than 20 million euros in 2014. Hahne opened his first Vapiano restaurant in Cologne in August 2006 and in 2015 with his company apeiron AG, Hahne operates six L'Osteria franchise restaurants, a direct Vapiano competitor, and two self-owned restaurants GinYuu.
Then in November of 2015, the next public relations bomb goes off with allegations regarding the company's quality standards. The company immediately investigates the issue through internal and external specialists but finds no evidence of any quality issues. Nevertheless, knowing that the group is now being closely watched, the company’s already in place hygiene standards are being reinforced. Additional audits and inspections are performed nationally. Further, all Vapianos worldwide are being audited twice by the partners SGS Institut Fresenius and SAI Global. Auditing software is purchased to simplify the implementation of the audits and the resulting measures. Apart from the external examinations, there is a food sampling plan in place being performed continuously. Again, all of this sucks up costs, management time and attention. With all these tumultuous developments the company’s growth engine is undeterred. Revenue grows by a whopping 50 million euros to 202 million euros, an increase of 33%. Impressive. While average spent per customer increases in all countries, the number of customers per day in Germany decreases by 3.3% partially due to the negative press towards the end of the year. Five own, four JV and 19 new franchise restaurants are added that year to the group, the total number of own managed restaurants grows to 51, there are 31 JVs and 84 franchises which bringing the total to 166 Vapiano restaurants. Global restaurant sales are now above 400 million euros.
But while revenue grows by an astronomical 50 million euros, operating profits, alarmingly, shrink again. Gross margins are staying perfectly healthy above 75% but operating costs keep growing disproportionately fast. The Company’s outstanding debt jumps by almost 30 million, close to 85 million euros by the end of the year. With operating profits at 9.5 million euros, alarm bells should be going off right now.
In Q4 of 2015, new CEO Jochen Halfmann introduces Strategy 2020. The new strategy includes five essential points. One, profitable growth in the newly defined core markets of Germany and Austria as well as in the UK, Netherlands, France and USA. Two, operational excellence through strict “best practice” management. Three, further development and digitalization of the concept considering guest feedback. Four, greater focus on long-term employee retention and five, building a modern and sustainable IT landscape. Sound’s good on paper but let’s see how things pan out.
Vapiano's investments (capital expenditures) that year are primarily directed towards new restaurant openings, renovations of existing establishments, and share acquisitions in other Vapiano restaurants from franchisees or JV partners. A significant portion of funds is allocated to the digitalization of the guest experience, including the development of a new app scheduled for market release in 2016 and the implementation of a time recording system across all group restaurants. The world's first standalone Vapiano restaurant with a delivery service that year is built in Fürth, Germany. The company keeps expanding its presence in both inner-city locations and international markets, such as Shanghai, China.
To finance all of this, the group has its own operating cash flow which comes in at 18 million while capital expenditures are 26 million euros plus 14 million for acquisitions. The funding gab is filled with 26 million euros of new debt and a seven-million-euro equity raise. At that end of the year and after the equity raise Gregor Gerlach (through his AP Leipzig GmbH & Co. KG entity) holds 30.1%, Hans-Joachim and Gisa Sander through their Exchange Bio GmbH hold 25.5% and the Tchibo heirs, Herz through their Mayfair Beteiligungsfonds II GmbH & Co. KG hold 44,4%.
But for the first time the restaurant’s concept that was so successful to date is being questioned. Some customers are starting to mislike the operational flow of the concept itself. If you want pasta, you must queue for pasta. If you want pizza you stand in a different queue. A small side salad, yet another queue. "You spend more time carrying trays than an actress in Berlin-Mitte. The audience in the pasta limbo can only consist of people who have worked for an insurance company for a long time and, like Stockholm syndrome, they can no longer get away from the industrial canteen feeling," writes TV host Beisenherz provocatively. While overly harsh in his assessment he's not entirely wrong judging by customers venting their frustrations in forums and social media channels. It isn’t uncommon for those who ordered pizza to have already finished eating while there is little movement in the pasta queue. Long term that doesn't go down well, QSRs competitors like L’Osteria are handling this process differently, with much success.
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Tipping Point

Where are now in the year 2016 and things start to deteriorate visibility. Perhaps not for the leman’s eye but any business minded observer can see that there are problems under the hood. Yes, revenue grows yet another whopping 50 million to almost 250 million euros but half of that growth, comes from acquisitions of restaurants that the group didn’t already own 100%, which is now being fully consolidated within the group’s accounts. Here is a concrete example. In the past, Vapiano SE, the group’s top holding company held an indirect 50% stake in a French subgroup via the subsidiary VAP Restaurants SA, based in Luxembourg, and included this as an associated company in the Vapiano SE consolidated financial statements using the equity method. Due to the acquisition of additional shares in September of 2016, Vapiano SE's indirect share in the French subgroup increased to 75%. This means that Vapiano SE takes control of the French subgroup, which is therefore included in the group’s financial statements as part of the full consolidation. The revenue from the acquired subsidiary now recorded in the consolidated income statement amounts to 12.8 million euros. While that’s great for the top line, the loss of the fully consolidated entity equates to 0.2 million euros. Yes, you are buying revenue, but there are losses attached to them, not profits. A similar case is the Swedish entity that runs eight restaurants with revenue of 11.5 million euros but has losses of 235 thousand euros. So much for Strategy 2020 and “profitable” growth.
That year the group’s operating profits are absolutely tanking, halving to 3.5 million euros. Operating profits are now a mere 1,4% of revenue. Remember original founder Mark Korzilius who talked about operating margins of 25% to 28% at the restaurant level? Yes, there are overhead costs for the organization that sits above the chain of restaurants, but operating margins that low indicates a course correction is needed. What’s telling is that in the annual report, in the management discussion section, the company starts talking about EBITDA as a proxy measure of profitability, rather than operating profit or net income. This wasn’t the case in the years before. Is this window dressing for an upcoming IPO? EBITDA is short for earnings before interest, tax, depreciation, and amortization. How can you measure profitability of a restaurant chain that absolutely and unequivocally needs capital investment to maintain its restaurant operations, the very source of cash generation, by simply excluding this maintenance charge (depreciation in the income statement)? Vapiano’s own annual report talks about the fact that existing restaurants must be rejuvenated from time to time and that new interior designs have to be implemented every few years. These things wear and tear, they go out of style, kitchen equipment breaks and needs replacement. This business absolutely needs maintenance capital expenditure, why anyone talks of profits before these maintenance costs is beyond me. Fun fact: in the previous annual report EBITDA is mentioned seven times, mostly around restaurant acquisitions and financing, not however as a profit indication for the group. In the new annual report, EBITDA is mentioned 28 times. Maybe it’s just me but belated Charlie Munger liked to call EBITDA: bullsh*t earnings. When in doubt I stick with Charlie. Interestingly, EBITDA for Vapiano keeps growing while operating and net profits keep falling.
Operating cashflow for the group that year is about 21 million euros, but capital expenditure is 30 million and acquisitions for subsidiaries another 20 million. To finance these expenditures another 28 million euros of debt and 16 million of equity is raised. Net debt rises above 130 million euro. The operating cashflow of the group before any capital expenditures is 21 million euros. I am not sure free cash flow would be significantly positive after maintenance capex is paid out; it’s not broken out so we can’t be sure. Granted, I am not on the ground during this time, and I am not in the board room, I am simply reading what’s in front of me, but to me this is starting to look like a distressed situation. Regardless, the following year the company goes public.

IPO

Where are now in the year 2017 and its Vapiano’s first year as public company. The company’s annual report reads the following “Sales revenue, like-for-like growth (LfL) and the earnings figures EBITDA and adjusted EBITDA are used as the most important financial performance indicators for controlling operational business activities.” The very same report however also says: “The majority of the group's investments regularly go towards opening new restaurant locations and modernizing existing restaurants. The latter are differentiated into regular replacement investments that occur during ongoing operations (Maintenance CAPEX) and fundamental investments in the renovation of a restaurant (Remodeling CAPEX). On average, a restaurant remodeling takes place nine years after opening.” It says it right there in their own report; every nine years a remodeling is taking place. Remodeling and updating is not cost free, so why exclude depreciation charges which reflect capital expenditures? I understand that perhaps you would want to strip out one-off opening costs, that’s fine and fair, but don’t go overboard.
The number of restaurants increases by 26 (previous year: 13) to a total of 205. The increase consists of 27 new openings and one closure. Group revenue grows to an astonishing 325 million euros but here comes the shocker, operating profits turn negative to 25 million. Fine, strip out foreign exchange losses of 3 million, IPO costs of 5.8 million and new opening costs of 6.1 million and you still have 10 million euros of operational losses. All the while the debt load of almost 130 million hasn’t materially changed, so those operating losses are before a six-million-euro interest payment. 184 million euros are raised through the IPO of which 85 million go to the company. This money is earmarked for further expansion as the group has ambitions to almost double the footprint to 330 restaurants by the end of 2020. The company is currently not profitable on an operating basis, and still wants to expand aggressively? I don’t get it. The remaining 100 million euros of the IPO money raised is distributed to co-founder Gregor Gerlach and Wella heirs Hans-Joachim and Gisa Sander. The family office of the former Tchibo owners Günter and Daniela Herz with a 44% stake, don’t sell a single share. After the IPO, 32% of all the company’s shares are now in free float.
One year later, in 2018, things get even worse. Revenue grows to 371 million, but operating losses mount to 85 million euros, that’s before interest expenses of 9 million. Even the beloved EBITDA figure turns negative, meaning the operating business before any expansionary or even maintenance capital expenditures is loss making. All regions are experiencing significant deterioration in their earnings profiles. Like for like sales are down 1% across the board. That’s revenue, not profitability. The question naturally arises: is the Group approaching its natural saturation point here or this operational by nature? The operating cash flow is now 9 million while financing cost are close to 7 million. That leaves 2 million for maintenance capital for 74 own restaurants and 76 joint ventures ones. Describing this as financially tight, would be an understatement.
Things are not looking good at this point. Yet the company still grows restaurants by 26 new sites. 64 million euros are spent on acquisitions, new openings, and maintenance costs, financed through a 20 million-euro equity raise and 72 million of new debt. The Company now has net debt outstanding of over 160 million euros. After the equity raise and by the end of the year 2018, Mayfair owns 47.4%, VAP Leipzig, Gregor Gerlach’s entity owns 18.9% and the Sander couple own 15.5% of the company. Yes, the Sanders and Gerlach may have taken 100 million euros off the table, but they still have substantial skin in the game. Plus, Mayfair hasn’t sold a single share and instead injects more money into the company through the equity round. The stock has now fallen from its IPO price of 23 euros per share to under 6 euros by the end of 2018. Something must be done here. And indeed, there is pivot in strategy and a hard push for change. At last, the management team abandons its aggressive growth plan and curtails new openings significantly. Additionally, the team wants to run a thorough analysis of weak locations to then either discontinue or sell sites. In Europe, the operating focus will be put on corporate restaurants and joint ventures in major cities to ensure the ideal size and location to match the respective demographic target group. Outside of Europe, the franchising business is being expanded and at the same time a consolidation of the existing corporate and joint venture markets is being sought. All future investments will be reviewed to achieve higher rates of returns on new openings. Investments are also being made in the renovation of older restaurants. The goal in the future is to also open smaller formats, like Mini-Vapianos (less than 400 square meters) or Freestander at prominent transportation hubs outside city centers (currently in Fürth and Toulouse) to cater to individual location requirements, and to enter new partnerships. I am not sure why management hasn’t stopped all expansion altogether, bringing the ship in order first, getting profitable, clean up, all hands-on deck before considering any further expansions whatsoever. But again, it’s easy to comment from the sidelines; maybe they saw white spaces that would be covered by competing concepts if they weren’t moving fast and aggressively enough. Although pushing internationally means competing with local players such as Jamie's Italian, Prezzo, Pizza Express, Wagamama, Nando's and many more which brings in its own dynamic.
Management also aims to enhance guest satisfaction. This involves refining operational processes, reorganizing the support center, and refocusing on the core offering: providing fresh and high-quality Italian food at affordable prices for a broad audience. The group also aims to reduce waiting times, especially during lunch, while also improving the evening atmosphere. There is even what I would call an evolution, away from Vapiano’s original concept, reorientating the customer journey. The ordering flow is being changed, offering guests synchronized preparations of all dishes while eliminating wait times at the cooking stations. The open show kitchen remains, staying true to original mantra of freshness and transparency but now guests can choose their preferred method of ordering through a mobile app, using a digital order point (kiosk), or by personally placing an order with a waiter. Guests can still freely choose their table and are then informed about the complete preparation of their order through a pager or their smartphone. This is a substantial deviation from the original concept, but a needed one. The group is also exploring and implementing the expansion of take-away and home delivery services but only at suitable locations, not universally across new openings. I am not sure why home delivery is even a priority here; it adds operational complexity. It’s better to clean up shop first and get back to the basics before adding new complexities. To be fair management does try to simplify. There are 49 different permanent dishes on the menu and additional 10 seasonal ones. Customers can choose from eleven different types of pasta. There is simply too much choice, and it makes orders complicated. The company announced to slim the menu down to its most popular and typical Vapiano dishes. There’s no need for an Asian salad at an Italian restaurant. "We have to go back to the roots, i.e. classic, honest Italian cuisine" says COO Everke. Regardless, in November of 2018, the supervisory board pulls the plug on CEO Jochen Halfmann and replaces him with Cornelius Everke. Everke himself has just become COO five months ago. Since 2017 he was responsible for international expansion. From 2011 to 2017 that role was filled by Mario Bauer – put a pin in that name, he’ll play a key role in the groups fate later. Then nine months later, in the middle of 2019, Cornelius Everke quits. He essentially concludes that his skillset and experience in the areas of internation expansion is no longer needed in the foreseeable future. To put it differently: Vapiano has moved from a growth story and has become a restructuring case, and other skills are required for that job. In June of 2019 Everke says the following “(we’ve) made a bit of a mistake when it came to foreign expansion”. No sh#t. Vapiano postpones the presentation of the 2018 annual financial statements three times in the spring of 2019, citing negotiations over an urgently needed loan of 30 million euros. It’s not until the end of May that a binding loan commitment comes through from the financing banks and major shareholders.
We are now in August of 2019 and the corona pandemic is just around the corner. Supervisory board chief Vanessa Hall takes over as interim-CEO and things are unravelling. Visitor numbers are declining; originally, it was planned to sell the US business but halfway through the year the buyer cannot come up with the money. But not all restaurants are performing poorly. The group's poor figures contrast starkly as an example with the experiences of the Swiss-German franchisee, who runs six restaurants. The Sodano family in Switzerland pays Vapiano a royalty of 6% of sales for the use of the brand. Enrico Sodano explains in an interview that they operate largely autonomously from the licensor. If an “accident” were to occur, he could immediately replace the Vapiano sign with Sodano, he says. The family concluded the rents and contracts with employees and suppliers independently. The Sodano family have six locations in Bern, Basel and Zurich, around one million guests every year and 350 employees. Things are going well on the ground. The delivery service they’ve built is offering them a second income stream. Expansion into Winterthur, St. Gallen and Lucerne are being planned; small locations with 150 to 250 square meters and an attached delivery service. Originally, Vapiano restaurants used to be huge but for such a large restaurant to be profitable, 800 to 1,000 guests per day are needed. That’s possible in medium-sized cities, but not in smaller towns which is why the Vapiano group now also supports smaller formats. Back to our corporate drama. The 2019 annual report would be the last report the group files. By the end 2019 the outstanding debt of the company is at an astronomical 450 million euros. Revenue has grown by another 7%, produced by four net new openings through two JVs and two franchise restaurants but operating losses come in at 317 million euros. That sound like an absolute shocker at first but depreciation and amortization charges are 345 million, so that operating cash flow is actually positive but unfortunately capital expenditures and interest payments are so large that they are eating up all of the company’s operating cash flow. Then in the beginning of 2020 Corona hits with full force and the world shuts down. As a result of the measures to prevent further spreading of the virus, the group is forced to cease all global business operations (except in Sweden). While all these shutdowns are happening, the group is the middle of negotiating with its lending banks and main shareholders. There are additional financing needs for restructuring measures, even without a pandemic happening in the background. The situation is so dire that the company starts pleading to the German government to roll out the package of financial help more quickly. Unfortunately, it’s to no end. The rapid closure of restaurants and the resulting lack of operating cash inflows in conjunction with the additional financing requirements, lead to the company’s final knockout punch. In April of 2020, the Vapiano group officially files for insolvency proceedings. The end of an era.

New Beginnings

Because of the pandemic, the majority of the group's subsidiaries in Austria, the Netherlands, Denmark, the United States, Sweden, and China also file for insolvency or seek liquidation. The US business never gets sold in the end and is wound down. In the summer of 2020, significant group divestments occur, including the sale of 75% shares in the group's French subsidiaries, shares in franchisor companies, Australian subsidiaries, German subsidiaries, associated companies, self-managed restaurants in Germany, and insolvency-related sales in the Netherlands, Great Britain, and Sweden. The buyer of the Vapiano brand and one of these bundles of Vapiano restaurants is company named Love & Food Restaurant Holding, a consortium led by Mario C. Bauer – a name I told you to remember. Bauer was a former Vapiano board member and led the national and international expansion, opening 200 sites in 33 countries from 2011 to 2017 until he was succeeded by Cornelius Everke. Bauer didn’t feel comfortable with the IPO at the time but clearly has a lot of managerial and entrepreneurial talent.
The buyer consortium is an absolute A-Team comprised of European QSR top league hitters, including the founder of the Pret A Manger chain Sinclair Beecham; Henry McGovern, the founder and Ex-CEO of the giant international restaurant and foodservice operator AmRest; the Van der Valk Family that runs hotels and Vapiano restaurants in the Netherlands, and co-founder and ex-CEO Gregor Gerlach. The acquisition value is 15 million euros and entails 30 Vapiano restaurants in Germany, albeit that’s just the purchase price which comes on top of any capital investment needed to refresh and return the sites to its former glory. Nevertheless, just as a thought experiment, if you can get each site to 2 million euros of revenue and 400,000 euros in operating profit on average, which wouldn’t be an overly aggressively assumption given the company’s history, you’ve got yourself a package that can deliver restaurant-level operating profits of 12 million euros or more. It’s not disclosed how much capex was needed to refresh the operations, just that fact that the overall investment plus purchase price was a middle double-digit million-euro figure. Stil, it probably was a decent purchase. The same consortium buys Vapiano’s French business for 25 million euros just two weeks prior. After the transaction concludes, the master franchise is given to Delf Neumann and his Gastro & Soul GmbH. Neumann is an experienced operator, and he is ambitious to revitalise the brand with new services and products. For example, instead of pizza, the restaurants will be serving pinsa - a flatbread made from sourdough, wheat and rice flour, topped similarly to a pizza. It targets a more health-oriented customer base looking for a less calory heavy option. The menu overall is expanded by including a variety of vegan and vegetarian dishes.
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Today Neumann’s Gastro & Soul GmbH operates 18 Vapianos on its own account and has 29 franchise sites, amongst other brands. By the year 2021, Vapiano operates 191 restaurants in 34 countries. This is around 50 fewer sites than before the bankruptcy. The number of branches is particularly thinned out in Germany – from 80 to 55. Nevertheless, Vapiano's home country remains by far the largest market, followed by France with 35 restaurants and Austria with 15 locations. “We have shrunk ourselves to health,” says Bauer in the aftermath and there is no further shrinking planned. Quite the opposite, the smell of expansion is in the air again – pun intended. Not as aggressively as before and with a new menu and ordering process.
Overall, the team around Bauer is filled with industry experts with knowledge and networks gained over decades who have a great track record, a long-term view, and the staying power to let Vapiano breath and finds its way back to success. The pressure of being a public company with all the associated quarterly, half-year and yearly disincentives have been removed. The menu is changed and extended with new types of pasta and sauces with significantly more vegetarian and vegan dishes available. Guests can order with restaurant staff, at terminals or on their phones and there are barcodes attached to the tables identify the respective seat. The food is brought to your table, all at the same time if you are in a group, no more annoyances with waiting in line. There is a plan for smaller, 350 square meter locations, with half the number of guests and significantly fewer staff and less set-up costs required to make the economics work. Locations that capitalize on remote work and increased demand for local lunch options, higher population density with shorter delivery routes and therefore cost-effective in house delivery services are targeted. And Bauer is testing the concept of ghost kitchens, which operate without a dining room or service staff, focusing solely on preparing food for delivery services, which for obvious reasons have a very different operational set up and footprint. Original founder Mark Korzilius however is not entirely convinced. He is not a fan of the pinsa for instance and he considers Vapiano's pizza as its cash cow, flagship product and believes that the core Vapiano proposition of Pizza, Pasta, Bar that has given the company its original success is being diluted. He instead admires the competitor L'Osteria, saying they’ve done a better job by focusing on Italian classics, especially the impressively large pizzas that sticks out beyond the plate is leaving every customer in awe. The guys who run L’Osteria are the same guys who have built Vapiano with him in the first place. Bauer on the other hand, like a true business leader, remains undeterred, stating that he is frequently asked whether Vapiano's restart was bold or foolish. He believes in entrepreneurship, franchising, in his experienced fellow partners and importantly the Vapiano concept. By the year 2024 you can find over 140 Vapiano branded restaurant in 27 countries across the globe, including locations far away from its birthplace like Australia, USA, Columbia, Chile, Bahrain, and Saudi Arabia. And why not? Italian food is, and will remain to be, incredibly popular. Vapiano offers fresh and tasty food at affordable prices in a good atmosphere. This combination of attributes should attract a lot of customers. It certainly has in the past.
For more stories: WIP Thomas Weitzendoerfer Substack
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