Bankrupt U.S. retailers begin to catch a break
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[October 06, 2017]
By Jessica DiNapoli and Tracy Rucinski
(Reuters) - An unexpected helping hand from
creditors, landlords and vendors is allowing more U.S. retailers to stay
in business following bankruptcy with most of their stores and employees
in the fold.
The new approach marks a turning point for the beleaguered sector, which
has seen at least 19 brick-and-mortar retail chains shut down the bulk
of their operations since 2014.
Until this year, most bankrupt retailers, including American Apparel,
Sports Authority and The Limited, were dismantled during their
bankruptcy process. Investors and companies acquired their intellectual
property and other assets, but refused to take on their business as a
going concern because they saw little value in assuming costly store
leases. Instead, they often opted to revamp some of the battered brands
online.
For a graphic, click http://tmsnrt.rs/2yWXSjs
However, several creditors, landlords and vendors now see more value
left in some retailers, and are seizing on an opportunity to minimize
their own losses in the retail rout.
This could spell a slowdown in the decline in brick-and-mortar retail
jobs, which fell by more than 100,000 this year, as more than 6,000
stores shuttered under increasing pressure from competition among
traditional retailers as well as e-commerce firms such as Amazon.com Inc
<AMZN.O>.
"We're seeing a set of situations come together in which the
constituencies have more interest in the retailer surviving than not,"
said Holly Etlin, a managing director at AlixPartners LLP, a consulting
firm that worked on the bankruptcy of Gymboree.
Jeans company True Religion Apparel Inc and perfume wholesaler and
retailer Perfumania Holdings Inc <PERF.O> are set to emerge from
bankruptcy with at least some of their stores in operation, according to
interviews with bankruptcy attorneys and a Reuters review of financial
information of more than 15 retailers shared with bankruptcy courts.
These chains will follow a path blazed by Payless ShoeSource, which in
August emerged from bankruptcy while keeping more than 3,400 out of its
4,200 stores worldwide, and preserving 19,000 of its 22,000 employees.
Last month, teen clothing shop rue21 Inc and children's apparel chain
Gymboree Corp came out of bankruptcy in similar fashion, preserving much
of their store footprints and employee headcount.
Most of these retailers were owned by private equity firms, which
saddled them with debt in a risky bid to juice returns. But in
bankruptcy talks, the chains are arguing successfully that they can
generate enough cash to withstand the sector's woes if their debt
mountains are slashed and payment obligations eased.
Creditors, landlords and vendors are more receptive to this approach,
because their own financial projections show that liquidations would
result in a limited recovery of what they are owed, according to
interviews with debt investors and bankruptcy court filings.
Had rue21 liquidated, for example, many loan holders would have seen
almost the entire value of their investment wiped out by the end of its
five-month bankruptcy process, according to bankruptcy court filings and
people familiar with the matter.
This new reality offers grounds for optimism for Toys "R" Us Inc, which
last month became the largest retail bankruptcy in 13 years. The biggest
U.S. specialty toy retailer plans to emerge from Chapter 11 bankruptcy
with many of its about 1,600 stores, employing 64,000 people, remaining
open.
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An American Apparel store logo is pictured on a building along the
Lincoln Road Mall in Miami Beach, Florida, U.S. on March 17, 2016.
REUTERS/Carlo Allegri/File Photo
Toys "R" Us plans to argue that its annual cash flow of roughly $800 million
would make it viable if its $5.2 billion in debt is significantly reduced,
according to court papers and people familiar with the matter.
CREDITOR SUPPORT KEY
If a retailer's brand is strong enough and its operations can be improved,
creditors see greater value in forgiving some of their debt in exchange for
equity stakes, rather than recouping pennies on the dollar in a liquidation.
David Tawil, president at distressed-focused hedge fund Maglan Capital, said it
makes sense for creditors to extend new money, often at high interest rates, in
exchange for a fully restructured balance sheet and a better business plan.
"Otherwise, there may be a very, very steep haircut (in the value of the debt)
to be taken upon a liquidation," Tawil said.
For example, a group of Gymboree investors, including distressed debt-oriented
hedge fund Brigade Capital Management LP and buyout firm Searchlight Capital
Partners LP, agreed to keep it in business by writing off most of their term
loan and investing another $95 million, in exchange for equity ownership, court
filings showed.
Gymboree and Brigade declined to comment.
"There is always risk taking (the company) through bankruptcy, but we believed
that it was a better path with more upside versus liquidating, where the
recovery is pretty minimal and you forego any upside opportunities," said
Searchlight partner Eric Sondag. He added that Gymboree's strong brand was a key
consideration in Searchlight deciding to back it.
Many landlords that rent out store space are also willing to provide relief
rather than seeking another tenant amid a glut of unused mall space. Rue21's
landlords granted rent reductions of about 20 percent on its remaining 758
stores, according to a person who asked not be identified because the terms of
the lease deals are not public.
VENDORS WAIT LONGER TO BE PAID
Supplier support is also critical. Vendors can offer longer payment terms,
helping retailers free up working capital to operate. They are often promised
full repayment on their claims in return.
Hong Kong-based Li & Fung Ltd, a supply chain manager that helps retailers work
with apparel and accessories makers, gave Gymboree a 75-day repayment period in
exchange for full payment on its claims in the bankruptcy, people familiar with
the matter said.
Before Gymboree filed for bankruptcy, the retailer also extended Li & Fung a $20
million secured claim, helping keep merchandise flowing to its stores, the
sources added. Li & Fung declined to comment.
Toys "R" Us has also fought to keep suppliers onboard, accelerating its plan to
file for bankruptcy to be able to pay them. It has been making progress in
winning back vendors who curbed shipments over payment fears.
"We believe (in Toys 'R' Us)... they are a good channel and important to the toy
industry," said Michael Araten, chief executive of K'Nex Limited Partnership
Group, a toymaker that is now negotiating new shipment terms.
(Reporting by Jessica DiNapoli in New York and Tracy Rucinski in Chicago;
Editing by Greg Roumeliotis and Edward Tobin)
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