Hudson's Bay taps debt
adviser amid Neiman Marcus bid challenges: sources
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[May 08, 2017]
By Jessica DiNapoli and Lauren Hirsch
(Reuters) -
Canada's
Hudson's Bay Co has hired a debt restructuring adviser to review
potential options for combining its business with debt-laden U.S.
department store operator Neiman Marcus Group, according to people
familiar with the matter.
The move is the clearest indication yet that Neiman Marcus' $4.7 billion
debt pile poses significant challenges to a merger between Hudson's Bay,
owner of the Lord & Taylor and Saks Fifth Avenue retail chains, and
private equity-owned Neiman Marcus.
Hudson's Bay Executive Chairman Richard Baker set his sights on Neiman
Marcus, operator of 42 eponymous stores across the United States and two
Bergdorf Goodman stores in Manhattan, two months ago, after larger U.S.
peer Macy's Inc spurned his acquisition overtures.
Since then, deal talks between Hudson's Bay and Neiman Marcus have made
little progress, the sources said.
Hudson's Bay has now tapped investment bank Evercore Partners Inc, and
has asked it to come up with ways that the two companies can combine
without Hudson's Bay assuming the full burden of Neiman Marcus' debt,
the sources said, asking not to be identified because the matter is
confidential.
Hudson's Bay and Neiman Marcus did not respond to requests for comment.
Evercore declined to comment.
Neiman Marcus' $2.8 billion loan and $1.6 billion in bonds are trading
at deep discounts to their face value, indicating that creditors do not
expect to get paid in full, as the company grapples with consumers'
changing spending habits, weak mall traffic, and the increased price
transparency brought about by the rise of internet shopping.
An acquisition of Neiman Marcus would normally require its acquirer to
assume its debt at its face value. Hudson's Bay, which already carries
about $2.4 billion in debt on a market capitalization of $1.5 billion,
would essentially triple its debt load by doing so.
As a result, Hudson's Bay does not want to repay Neiman Marcus'
creditors in full, the sources said. While the terms of Neiman Marcus'
bonds allow their transfer to a publicly listed acquirer, Hudson's Bay
is reluctant to take them on at full value, the sources added.
Any acquisition offer that would be accompanied by a debt haircut would
pit Hudson's Bay against several hedge funds and investment firms that
have acquired Neiman Marcus' debt and are poised to drive a hard
bargain.
These include Oaktree Capital Group LLC, Canyon Partners LLC and Capital
Group Companies, which have acquired Neiman Marcus bonds, and H/2
Capital Partners, Eaton Vance Management, and GSO Capital Partners,
which have invested in Neiman Marcus' loan, the sources said.
Oaktree, GSO, and Capital Group declined to comment. Canyon, H/2 and
Eaton Vance did not return requests for comment.
PAYING NEIMAN MARCUS OWNERS
Adding to the challenges of a deal are Neiman Marcus' owners, Ares
Management LP and the Canada Pension Plan Investment Board (CPPIB). They
acquired Neiman Marcus in 2013 for $6 billion, including debt, and
expect to be paid for selling the company, according to the sources,
even though the debt markets currently assign little value to their
equity.
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A man exits a Hudson's Bay department store in Toronto, Ontario,
Canada June 6, 2016. REUTERS/Chris Helgren/File Photo
Neiman
Marcus does not face any significant debt maturities until 2020, when its loan
comes due, so Ares and CPPIB still have three more years to try to turn the
business around.
To convince Ares and CPPIB to let go of any hope of recovering the value of
their equity on their own, Hudson's Bay will have to offer them some kind of
payment, the sources said. This puts Hudson's Bay in a bind, because Neiman
Marcus' creditors will be less inclined to accept a haircut if they see Ares and
CPPIB receive such a payment, the sources said.
Complicating negotiations further is a confidentiality agreement between Neiman
Marcus' owners and Hudson's Bay that has so far prevented the latter from
communicating directly with Neiman Marcus' creditors over a potential haircut,
the sources said.
Ares and CPPIB declined to comment.
COMPLEX DEAL
Another possibility that Hudson's Bay is contemplating is not crossing the
50-percent ownership threshold at Neiman Marcus in any deal, be it through an
equity stake investment or a joint venture, the sources said.
This
would remove any obligation for Hudson's Bay to assume Neiman Marcus' debt,
according to the sources. Yet such a deal would make Hudson's Bay an investor in
Neiman Marcus, rather than its acquirer, restricting its ability to achieve the
full benefits and cost synergies that typically arise from a shared capital
structure and integrated organization, the sources said.
It would also require Hudson's Bay to pay for a minority stake in a company
whose equity is on paper close to being wiped out, the sources added.
Given these challenges, Hudson's Bay has not yet settled on a way forward, and
it is possible that its negotiations with Neiman Marcus end without any deal,
the sources said.
With its shares hovering near five-year lows, Hudson's Bay is keen for any deal
that will revitalize its earnings and relieve the burden of paying rent to the
real estate properties it carved out into joint ventures. It is now considering
an initial public offering of its real estate.
Neiman Marcus has been working on debt restructuring initiatives of its own.
Earlier this year, it made changes to subsidiaries holding real estate in Texas
and Virginia, as well as its online brand MyTheresa, potentially allowing it to
issue new debt to buy back its bonds at a discount.
(Reporting by Jessica DiNapoli and Lauren Hirsch in New York; Additional
reporting by Davide Scigliuzzo in New York; Editing by Greg Roumeliotis and
Sandra Maler)
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