Fanatec Parent Company Endor Files For Insolvency

Fanatec-Endor-Insolvency.jpg
Image: Endor AG
One of the biggest sim racing hardware manufacturers is filing for insolvency: Endor AG, the parent company of Fanatec, now took this step. Corsair is out as a strategic investor.

The drama surrounding Fanatec and its parent company Endor AG continues. After its founder Thomas Jackermeier was ousted as CEO earlier this year, the plan was for the company to revitalize itself via the StaRUG procedure, with US hardware giant Corsair acting as a strategic investor to provide bridge financing. Once Endor would be financially stable again, Corsair intended to take over the company.

More recently, rumors about suppliers going on strike appeared, and a Extraordinary General Meeting was authorized to be held by two shareholders by the Local Court of Landshut. The purpose of this meeting, among other things, would be to withdraw confidence form the current Management Board.

According to the latest press release of Endor AG, this led to the original plan not being carried out: "The reason for this was the request by the former CEO and majority shareholder to convene an extraordinary general meeting in order to prevent a reorganisation under the StaRUG without presenting a viable alternative scenario." Currently, Endor is facing liabilities of €95 million, according to the press release.

StaRUG Procedure Fails​

The mention of "the former CEO" points in the direction of Jackermeier being one of the shareholders calling for the Extraordinary General Meeting. However, the ruling in favor of the meeting was not the only reason on the StaRUG plan falling apart, according to the press release:

"At the same time, negotiations with the majority shareholder on a financial reorganisation involving all shareholders have been taking place in recent weeks. However, these negotiations had to be broken off without result due to unrealistic demands."

As a result of these "ongoing disruptions", Corsair decided not to make additional payments. The company has received several design trademarks of Fanatec products as "collateral against the loans", as Corsair told OverTake when queried about the reason for the trademarks changing hands. At the time of writing this article, these trademarks are still with Corsair.

Porsche-Vision-GT-Patent-Render.jpg

Render of a Porsche Vision GT sim racing wheel included in the patent filing currently owned by Corsair. Image: Fanatec/Corsair/DPMA

Whether or not they stay with the company, Corsair might not be out of the frame entirely after all. The press release informing about the insolvency filing also contains the following paragraph:

"The Management Board is confident that the company will be taken over by an investor in the course of the insolvency proceedings; at the same time, the Management Board assumes that CORSAIR is still interested in acquiring Endor AG."

"Numerous Wrong Decisions In Recent Years"​

The current Management Board also highlighted that it "sees the reasons for the massive corporate crisis in numerous wrong management decisions in recent years. Examples include the oversized construction of the new company headquarters, miscalculated chip and merchandise orders that led to high write-downs and failures to introduce processes and systems worth millions."

Andres Ruff, who succeeded Jackermeier as Endor CEO, adds: "We would like to thank our customers, employees and business partners for their trust and support over the past months. As part of the insolvency proceedings, we will continue the restructuring and work at full speed to reorganise the company. We are confident that we will emerge stronger from this situation and return to a sustainable, profitable growth path."


What changes for sim racers now?​

All business background aside, what does this mean for sim racers? The press release adresses this as well, stating that "business operations will continue." While takeover processes continue in the background, day-to-day operations including "sales and warranty repair services will continue without restriction, and customers will continue to receive driver and software updates."

What are your thoughts on Endor AG filing for bankruptcy? Let us know on Twitter @OverTake_gg or in the comments below!
About author
Yannik Haustein
Lifelong motorsport enthusiast and sim racing aficionado, walking racing history encyclopedia.

Sim racing editor, streamer and one half of the SimRacing Buddies podcast (warning, German!).

Heel & Toe Gang 4 life :D

Comments

My guess is that this has happened because Corsair want the IP and products but dont want to take on the liabilities of the customers or shareholders.So if they wanted to run the current company as a going concern they would have to honor warranties,orders and possibly pay back some money to shareholders.
If the current Endor company does not exist and Corsair own the products IP etc.they can just start a new Company and call it Fanatec Sim or similar.Then if Corsair is sensible they will as a gesture of good will honor the warrantee etc on products sold and also orders that are placed because the sim racing community would be less likley to buy products from the new company if they dont look after customers.
This is not Corsair getting the company on the cheap.Just not wanting to open itself up to a more expensive or complicated process.Suppliers will be kept on side and they wont have to take on all the debts owed for payroll and other taxes to the German government that will be part of the debt.
Either way Fanatec will exist because there is to much value in the products and the name.
 
From the very beginning, the entire Fanatec takeover appeared 'sketchy' at best.
They're just too many players...with too much to gain financially from a simple take-over... directing the process.
That should never be the case.
A completely neutral arbitrator should be in charge of this process.
Quite frankly...I'd rather see it completely dissolved and come back as something else IF the shareholders are being given the 'business' and while the company still has some value.
There is nothing more infuriating than seeing a few guys with an agenda take over the assets, while screwing the people who supported the effort with their money.
If it is completely dead, then they can at least say the company went under and they lost the investment.
That's be more palatable.
 
At the risk of sounding like a broken record... Every time I've dealt with Fanatec, everything went very well, probably because I'm Canadian and I deal with its North American branch. I'm fully aware that customers in other areas have not had the same experiences as me, but Fanatec was not entirely bad, as too many people on this board say.
I did not have any issues at all with my fanatec gear but I sold it all off earlier this year as I did not want to support this basket case of a company anymore with any further purchases. The way they operate I find disgraceful. I jumped ship to Simagic and the only thing I miss from fanatec is fanalab and the profiles Maurice did. That software is amazing. I am sure there are many individuals that have good experiences with fanatec over the years but you cannot ignore all the problems they have had over the last year and they are now reaping what they have sowed.
 
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I did not have any issues at all with my fanatec gear but I sold it all off earlier this year as I did not want to support this basket case of a company anymore with any further purchases. The way they operate I find disgraceful. I jumped ship to Simagic and the only thing I miss from fanatec is fanalab and the profiles Maurice did. That software is amazing. I am sure there are many individuals that have good experiences with fanatec over the years but you cannot ignore all the problems they have had over the last year and they are now reaping what they have sowed.
My only direct purchase from Fanatec/Endor saw them send me a set of RMAed Clubsport V1 as a new set.
The other person who returned them had left his bill inside the packaging box.
I called them to ask for a return label and they said the pedals were new but had been returned by a client who'd had a change of heart.
I called the client since I had his billing information, to confirm.
They still wanted me to accept the pedals as new but I wasn't having it.
In the end, they sent a tuning kit and a color kit as a form of discount.
 
My only direct purchase from Fanatec/Endor saw them send me a set of RMAed Clubsport V1 as a new set.
The other person who returned them had left his bill inside the packaging box.
I called them to ask for a return label and they said the pedals were new but had been returned by a client who'd had a change of heart.
I called the client since I had his billing information, to confirm.
They still wanted me to accept the pedals as new but I wasn't having it.
In the end, they sent a tuning kit and a color kit as a form of discount.
What did the guy who returned them say to you? Yeah, they are shady AF. As far as I am concerned the good gear they make does not make up for the poor operations and lack of transparency
 
What did the guy who returned them say to you? Yeah, they are shady AF. As far as I am concerned the good gear they make does not make up for the poor operations and lack of transparency
Guy was from Seattle.
He said he'd ordered them and had taken them out of the box long enough to barely try them...then had a change of heart.
 
Guy was from Seattle.
He said he'd ordered them and had taken them out of the box long enough to barely try them...then had a change of heart.
I guess he wasn't impressed, lol. I am surprised that fanatec haven't come out with podium pedals after all this time
 

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