Exclusive: Payless
settles creditor dispute over dividends - sources
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[June 21, 2017]
By Jessica DiNapoli and Tracy Rucinski
(Reuters) - Payless ShoeSource Inc settled
a dispute with its creditors on Tuesday, after creditors alleged that
the company's private equity owners inappropriately siphoned off $400
million before the U.S. retailer's bankruptcy, people familiar with the
matter said.
The case has been monitored closely by other private equity-owned
companies and their creditors, because it could spark more claims
against bankrupt companies over so-called dividend recapitalizations,
which involve a company borrowing money so it can pay the buyout firms
which own it a special dividend.
Payless' creditors had said in court filings that private equity firms
Golden Gate Capital and Blum Capital, which together hold 98.5 percent
of the company and control its board, received more than $400 million in
dividends in recent years.
This added to the company's debt pile. Payless filed for bankruptcy in
April with $838 million of debt, joining a long list of retailers
struggling in a sharp downturn in the sector.
Under the settlement, the shoe chain's unsecured creditors, largely its
landlords and vendors, will receive $25 million in cash in the
bankruptcy reorganization, the people said, asking not to be identified
because the deal is not yet public.
The payout amounts to a recovery of between 17 and 21 cents on the
dollar for the claims of the creditors, a major improvement from the
pennies they expected when the case began, one of the people said.
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A Payless ShoeSource store is pictured in the Manhattan borough of
New York, New York, U.S. April 4, 2017. REUTERS/Carlo Allegri
The shoe seller and its owners did not to admit to any wrongdoing as part of the
settlement, the people said. The deal will net an additional $7.3 million for
another pool of creditors, the people said.
Golden Gate and Payless declined to comment. Blum did not immediately return a
request for comment.
The agreement sets Payless on track to exit bankruptcy as soon as August,
according to the people and court papers, avoiding winding down its business
like many of its bankrupt peers.
Payless said last month that independent board member Charles Cremens was
conducting his own investigation of possible claims against the private equity
firms. The company opposed a separate investigation by the creditors, saying it
could hinder attempts to bring the company out of bankruptcy.
As part of its reorganization plan, Payless has said it must renegotiate 3,600
U.S. store leases as well as joint venture partnerships in Latin America, a
region it has described as a cornerstone for future growth.
(Reporting by Jessica DiNapoli in New York and Tracy Rucinski in Chicago;
Editing by Leslie Adler)
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