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As US turns 250 this July 4, family sells company for $1.7 bln; 540 workers become millionaires

A Louisiana family sold their 43-year-old electrical-equipment company Fibrebond to power-management giant Eaton for $1.7 billion last year—with one unusual clause built into the deal. Former CEO Graham Walker insisted 15% of the proceeds go to his 540 workers, none of whom held

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As US turns 250 this July 4, family sells company for $1.7 bln; 540 workers become millionaires

EditionININUSGCCEnglishEnglishहिन्दीमराठीಕನ್ನಡதமிழ்বাংলাമലയാളംతెలుగుગુજરાતીWeatherSign InTOIToday's ePaperLive EditionININUSGCCEnglishEnglishहिन्दीमराठीಕನ್ನಡதமிழ்বাংলাമലയാളംతెలుగుગુજરાતીWeatherSign In TOIToday's ePaperLive NewsTechnology NewsTech NewsAs US turns 250 this July 4, a family sold their electrical company for $1.7 billion and made 540 workers millionairesTrendingMacOS DVD PlaybackMicrosoft Frontier CompanyMichael BurrySAP Restricts Hiring And TravelNikesh AroraRussia Apple FinePhil ChenFree Fire Max Redeem CodesSit In Customers OfficeSanjay MehrotraMacOS DVD PlaybackMicrosoft Frontier CompanyMichael BurrySAP Restricts Hiring And TravelNikesh AroraRussia Apple FinePhil ChenFree Fire Max Redeem CodesSit In Customers OfficeSanjay MehrotraMacOS DVD PlaybackMicrosoft Frontier CompanyMichael BurrySAP Restricts Hiring And TravelNikesh AroraRussia Apple FinePhil ChenFree Fire Max Redeem CodesSit In Customers OfficeSanjay MehrotraAs US turns 250 this July 4, a family sold their electrical company for $1.7 billion and made 540 workers millionairesTOI Tech Desk / TIMESOFINDIA.

COM / Jul 04, 2026, 08:15 ISTCommentsShareAA+Text SizeSmallMediumLarge A US boss sold his family company for $1.7 billion and gave 540 workers $240 million of it. (Disclaimer: AI generated image) The week America turns 250, a story from small-town Louisiana is worth pulling back up.

A family sold their 43-year-old electrical-equipment company for $1.7 billion last year—but before signing, the chief executive wrote in a clause almost no seller bothers with: 15% of the proceeds had to go to the 540 workers on the floor, roughly $443,000 a head on average. The business in question is Fibrebond, headquartered in Minden, a Louisiana town of about 12,000 people roughly half an hour from Shreveport.

The Walker family had run it for 43 years before agreeing to sell to power-management major Eaton. What made the transaction unusual was a clause former chief executive Graham Walker refused to drop: 15% of the sale had to be set aside for staff, even though not a single employee held equity. The Wall Street Journal was first to break the story.

Why $443,000 landed in 540 mailboxesPayouts started reaching workers in June. The average cheque works out to around $443,000, with the longest-serving staff pocketing considerably more. The money is being released over five years, and workers under 65 need to stay on to collect the full amount.

Those above that age were exempt from the retention clause—several took the exit and retired straight away. Pressed by the WSJ on why he chose 15% rather than 10 or 20, Walker offered a one-line answer: "It's more than 10%."The scenes on payout day, per the WSJ, played out like something scripted.

One employee asked whether hidden cameras were rolling. Another left the meeting on a golf cart with his fist punched into the air. "It was surreal, it was like telling people they won the lottery," business-development executive Hector Moreno was quoted saying.

Fibrebond factory fire, dot-com bust and the AI infrastructure comebackClaud Walker founded Fibrebond in 1982, initially building trackside structures for telephone and electrical equipment. A 1998 fire destroyed the factory. Then came the dot-com collapse a couple of years later—the customer list shrank to three, and headcount dropped from about 900 to 320.

Through the roughest patch, the family kept paying wages, something several employees told the WSJ they never forgot.The turnaround hinged on a $150 million bet on data-centre infrastructure, which paid off during the Covid-era cloud boom. The AI infrastructure buildout and LNG export terminal demand have kept the order book full since—sales climbed nearly 400% over five years, and the acquisition offers started coming in.

Cleared mortgages, a new Toyota Tacoma and 25 relatives in CancúnLesia Key, who joined in 1995 on $5.35 an hour, cleared her mortgage and opened a clothing boutique nearby. Hong Blackwell, 67, retired after 16 years and bought her husband a Toyota Tacoma.

Moreno took 25 relatives on a trip to Cancún.Graham Walker stepped down on December 31 last year. His family walked away with over $1 billion from the deal.

Get the latest technology news and updates. Download the TOI App.About the AuthorTOI Tech DeskThe TOI Tech Desk is a dedicated team of journalists committed to delivering the latest and most relevant news from the world of technology to readers of The Times of India.

TOI Tech Desk’s news coverage spans a wide spectrum across gadget launches, gadget reviews, trends, in-depth analysis, exclusive reports and breaking stories that impact technology and the digital universe. Be it how-tos or the latest happenings in AI, cybersecurity, personal gadgets, platforms like WhatsApp, Instagram, Facebook and more; TOI Tech Desk brings the news with accuracy and authenticity.Read MoreEnd of ArticleLatest MobilesView All PreviousTecno Pova 8 5G₹29,999OPPO A6₹23,699Realme P4R₹19,399Itel Zeno 200 4G Infini

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