RadioShack
would accept liquidation bids: lawyer
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[February 07, 2015]
By Nick Brown
(Reuters) - A lawyer for RadioShack on
Friday said the bankrupt electronics chain would accept all kinds of
bids for its assets, including from liquidators, although any
transaction would require court approval.
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RadioShack, which filed for Chapter 11 protection on Thursday, has a
tentative deal to sell as many as 2,400 of its 4,100 stores to an
affiliate of hedge fund Standard General, its lender and largest
shareholder. As part of that deal, wireless company Sprint Corp
would operate within those stores.
But any better bids, which RadioShack lawyer David Fournier said
could include liquidation offers, may trump that deal.
"We don't know exactly where we're going to end up," Fournier said
at a hearing in U.S. Bankruptcy Court in Delaware.
RadioShack, which posted 11 straight quarterly losses after failing
to transform itself into a destination for mobile phone buyers,
hopes to avoid the fate that plagues many bankrupt retailers:
liquidation.
U.S. bankruptcy law, which gives companies in Chapter 11 just 210
days to decide whether to break or reject leases, makes it hard for
retailers to formulate turnaround plans.
A court hearing on procedures for bidding on RadioShack's assets is
set for Feb. 20, with a final sale hearing tentatively scheduled for
March 12. RadioShack in court papers said it hoped to expedite the
process due to strict timeline milestones in the Standard General
deal.
Separately, RadioShack has said it will close more than 1,700
stores, a process it hopes to largely complete by the end of this
month to avoid paying an estimated $7 million in March rent.
Judge Brendan Shannon on Friday said RadioShack could begin taking
initial steps to close those stores over the weekend, but any
further measures will require additional approval. The company is
expected to seek that approval at a follow-up hearing scheduled for
Monday.
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A proposed $285 million bankruptcy loan from a lender group led by
DW Partners will also be addressed on Monday.
Any deal to liquidate or sell stores could face objections from
stakeholders. A lawyer representing Texas Attorney General Ken
Paxton said at Friday's hearing that his office might have concerns
over whether the Standard General sale would protect consumer
privacy.
RadioShack's unsecured creditors are expected to form a committee
later this month, adding another key voice to restructuring
negotiations.
The case is In Re RadioShack Corp, U.S. Bankruptcy Court, District
of Delaware, No. 15-10197.
(Reporting by Nick Brown; Editing by Lisa Von Ahn)
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