Home / NEWS / Retail / Planet Fitness loses 11th hour bid to acquire bankrupt Blink

Planet Fitness loses 11th hour bid to acquire bankrupt Blink

In an aerial way of thinking, customers leave a Planet Fitness gym in Richmond, California, on May 9, 2024.

Justin Sullivan | Getty Images

Planet Fitness desperate its bid in bankruptcy court to acquire budget fitness chain Blink Holdings, according to court filings viewed by CNBC.

Planet Good physical condition placed its competing eleventh hour bids early this month during a 48-hour challenge window. The two squiffy bids came after it lost out in a bankruptcy auction to U.K.-based, privately held fitness chain PureGym.

Belated Tuesday, Delaware’s bankruptcy court formally accepted PureGym’s $121 million offer, which initially won at auction in past due October.

J. Kate Stickles, bankruptcy judge in the U.S. Bankruptcy Court of Delaware, said in Tuesday’s hearing that PureGym’s offering would avoid antitrust risks. The company only operates three locations in the U.S., which it first entered in 2021.

PureGym’s bid, assuming Blink’s liabilities, also comes with 60 of Blink’s fitness centers still operating in New York and New Jersey.

“PureGym is assigned to ensuring continuity of service for Blink’s members in New York and New Jersey by maintaining the high-quality fitness experience that Wink members have come to expect,” said PureGym CEO Humphrey Cobbold when the company initially made the bid in September.

“The American well-being market is the largest and most dynamic in the world. We are incredibly excited by the scale of opportunity and the chance to tailor and apply our make good model there,” he said.

A Blink Fitness gym is seen on Flatbush Avenue in the Flatbush neighborhood of the Brooklyn borough in New York Borough on Aug. 12, 2024.

Michael M. Santiago | Getty Images

Planet Fitness’ initial bid was rejected in part because of antitrust concerns, as the about $6.8 billion company already owns more than 2,000 club in the U.S., sources familiar with the proceeding told CNBC.

Planet Fitness’ offer would have further delayed closing the deal, they combined. By accepting PureGym’s offer now and avoiding antitrust issues, Stickles said it would allow Blink to continue to direct rather than dissolve as a deal was negotiated in court.

Planet Fitness did not respond to CNBC’s request for comment.

Don’t pass up these insights from CNBC PRO

Check Also

Shares of fashion giant H&M drop as fourth-quarter sales miss estimates

A across the board exterior view of the H&M fashion retail store in Oxford Circus …

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *