Monaco Coach Corporation

Monaco Coach Corporation
Public
Traded as OTC Pink: MCOAQ
Industry Automobile manufacturing
Fate Acquired By Navistar International, Later Sold To Allied Specialty Vehicles
Founded 1968
Defunct 2009
Headquarters Coburg, Oregon
United States
Key people
Kay L. Toolson, Chairman & CEO
John W. Nepute, President
Products Recreational vehicles, RV chassis
Revenue $1.2 billion USD (FY 2005)
Number of employees
5,360 (2005)
Parent Allied Specialty Vehicles
Website www.monacocoach.com
Footnotes / references
[1]

Monaco Coach Corporation was an American corporation which primarily manufactured recreational vehicles (RVs) and RV chassis. The company was headquartered in Coburg, Oregon, and maintained significant manufacturing operations in various locations in Indiana.

History

Monaco was incorporated in 1968 as the Caribou Manufacturing Company. They began building pickup campers. The most popular line was named "Monaco." [2] In 1977 the name was changed to Monaco Coach Corporation. It acquired the Roadmaster Chassis Division of Chrysler Corporation in 1984 and the Holiday Rambler Division of Harley-Davidson in 1996. In 1987 Kay Toolson was appointed President.[3] Monaco manufactured seven brands of motorhomes and RVs, including Monaco, Beaver Motorcoach Corporation, Safari Motorcoach Corporation, McKenzie, Holiday Rambler, R-Vision, and Roadmaster Chassis. In 1994 Monaco President Kay Toolson announced they would move their Junction City operations to the Coburg Industrial Park in Eugene, Oregon.[4]

On March 4, 1996, the Monaco Coach Corporation acquired from Harley-Davidson, Inc. certain assets of Holiday Rambler (the "Holiday Acquisition") in exchange for $21.5 million in cash, 65,217 shares of Redeemable Preferred Stock (which was subsequently converted into 230,767 shares of Common Stock), and the assumption of most of the liabilities of Holiday Rambler. Concurrently, the Company acquired ten Holiday World Dealerships for $13.0 million, including a $12.0 million subordinated.[5]

In 2005, the company had sales of approximately US$1.2 billion, and employed nearly 5,400 people.[1]

On March 5, 2009 the company filed for Chapter 11 bankrutpcy.[6] On April 24, 2009 in U.S. Bankruptcy Court in Delaware, an attorney for Monaco said the company had signed an asset purchase agreement with Workhorse International Holding Co., a Navistar International subsidiary. Monaco's CEO was Kay Toolson.[7] On June 23, 2009, Judge Kevin Carey agreed to the company’s request to convert its Chapter 11 bankruptcy filing to a Chapter 7 case so it could liquidate its remaining assets, seven pieces of real estate in Oregon, Indiana and Florida. The order converting the case to Chapter 7 was effective June 30. Monaco Coach Corporation sold its factories, inventory, brands and intellectual property to Navistar International Corp. earlier in June for $47 million.[8] The RV resort properties in California, Nevada, Florida and Michigan were sold to various other buyers. Once the remaining assets are liquidated under Chapter 7, “the entity ceases to exist,” and effectively spells the end of Monaco Coach Corporation, said Andrea Coles-Bjerre, an assistant law professor at the University of Oregon and a former bankruptcy lawyer in New York.[9]

Monaco RV LLC was sold by Navistar International Corp. to Allied Specialty Vehicles in 2013 as Navistar restructured.[8]

References