Hostess Brands May Not Survive But Iconic Twinkie Will By  Morgan Korn |  Daily Ticker – 1 hour 14 minutes ago
   Twinkie fans may soon have reason to rejoice.
   The iconic junk food snack could return to store shelves if the  Hostess, maker of the Twinkie, Wonder Bread, Ho Ho's and Ding Dongs  brands, and private equity firm Sun Capital Partners agree to a deal.
   According to Dan Primack, a senior editor at Fortune.com, Sun wants  to buy the 82-year-old bankrupt company and even expressed interest in  an acquisition of Hostess Brands earlier in the year. Hostess announced  last week that it would enter liquidation because of a nationwide strike  by the Bakery, Confectionery, Tobacco Workers and Grain Millers (BCTGM)  Union. Hostess Brands CEO Gregory Rayburn said the strike had halted  production at two-thirds of the company's factories across the country.
     BCTGM union members went on strike Nov. 9 to protest wage and benefit  cuts that Hostess was seeking to slash operating expenses. Hostess  management decided to lay off nearly all of its 18,500 employees and  shut down its factories; product shipments would continue until the  remaining supply runs out. The beleaguered Hostess Brands faced serious  financial pressure before the union strike.
   The company had filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection in  January. On Monday Hostess, at the urging of Bankruptcy Judge Robert  Drain of the Southern District of New York, agreed to enter private  mediation with its lenders and union leaders to prevent liquidation.
   Primack says in an interview with The Daily Ticker that "there's plenty of blame" to be shared for the company's demise.
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   If Sun were to acquire Hostess, Primack says the firm would likely  keep the majority of Hostess' employees as well as reinvest in the  company's manufacturing infrastructure. Any deal between Sun and Hostess  would have to be approved by union leaders, Primack notes. But whether  it's Sun or another snack maker that buys Hostess, it appears likely  that the Twinkie brand will survive the recent turmoil.
   "In a year or two there will still be a Twinkie in the super market," Primack says. finance.yahoo.com |