Executive Summary
CMBG ran a voluntary wind-down for a fashion brand with $6 million in inventory and valuable trademark assets. The process monetized inventory, licensed the IP, satisfied secured obligations, and paid a modest dividend to trade creditors without litigation or a formal insolvency proceeding.
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Situation
The company was a fashion brand holding both unsold inventory and valuable trademark rights, but its largest retail counterparties defaulted, leaving it with a structure that no longer supported a viable operating future.
The goal became a controlled voluntary wind-down that could convert both tangible and intangible assets into value without the drag of litigation or a formal insolvency filing.
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Key Facts
The process had to monetize different asset classes on different channels without losing control of brand value.
Inventory
$6 million unsold
Asset Mix
Inventory plus international trademarks
Trigger
Largest retail partners defaulted
Process
Voluntary out-of-court liquidation
Creditor Outcome
Secured debt covered; modest trade dividend
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Liquidation Strategy
CMBG led the out-of-court liquidation and approached the company as a mixed-asset problem rather than a pure inventory sale. The inventory needed channel strategy, while the brand IP needed licensing and value protection.
- Sold inventory through multiple channels rather than a one-path dump sale.
- Structured licensing around the brand IP to preserve and monetize trademark value.
- Avoided litigation and a formal insolvency process.
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Result
The proceeds satisfied secured obligations and still supported a modest dividend to trade creditors. The company achieved a cleaner wind-down than a disorderly collapse would likely have delivered, without the administrative drag of a court process.
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Key Takeaways
- Not all liquidations are inventory-only problems; brand and IP value can materially change the result.
- A voluntary out-of-court path can preserve more value when litigation is avoidable and the asset base is still marketable.
- Channel strategy matters as much as legal structure when inventory is large and time-sensitive.