May 18, 2026
A Texas bankruptcy judge has given his assent on a final basis to a $300 million postpetition financing package in home shopping company QVC's Chapter 11 case.
May 15, 2026
QVC will seek final approval of its bankruptcy funding, e-commerce group Food52 will vie for confirmation of its liquidation plan, and First Brands Group will also court a judge's approval of its Chapter 11 plan.
May 13, 2026
Unsecured creditors of home shopping company QVC now have an official committee with its own proposed counsel, Pachulski Stang Ziehl & Jones LLP, a firm well known for high-stakes creditor work.
May 01, 2026
QVC told a Texas bankruptcy judge on Friday that granting shareholders' request to appoint an official equity committee in its Chapter 11 case would waste estate resources for the exclusive benefit of out-of-the-money investors, urging the judge to deny their request.
April 21, 2026
Home shopping network owner QVC entered Chapter 11, as did a solar panel installation company based in California, and a Cayman Islands-based solar business sought Chapter 15 recognition.
April 20, 2026
A team of attorneys from Gray Reed and Kirkland & Ellis are leading home shopping television company QVC through what they hope will be a quick trip through Chapter 11.
April 17, 2026
The buttoned-up Chapter 11 plan filed by QVC Group lays out a smooth course to speed through bankruptcy, as unsecured creditors are to be paid in full and its restructuring focuses on its balance sheet without touching operations, but the retailer's long-term survival still seems uncertain, experts told Law360.
April 17, 2026
QVC told a Texas bankruptcy judge Friday the home shopping television company wants to get its Chapter 11 debt swap plan confirmed by late May and emerge from the insolvency process within 90 days, as it seeks to cut $5 billion of liabilities from its balance sheet.
April 16, 2026
QVC Group Inc., the owner of pioneering home shopping television networks, filed for Chapter 11 protection in Texas on Thursday to slash about 80% of its $6.6 billion of debt, after turnaround efforts that cut jobs and launched live events on TikTok have failed to fully offset weakening consumer sentiment, the impact of tariffs and the yearslong slide of cable television.