In Kenmore sale, Sears' pension liabilities come back to
bite
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[August 22, 2018]
By Jessica DiNapoli
(Reuters) - Sears Holdings Corp is facing a
familiar foe in its bid to sell off the Kenmore appliances brand: the
U.S. government body that oversees the pensions for the company's
100,000 retirees.
Sears Chief Executive Eddie Lampert's hedge fund, ESL Investments Inc,
submitted bids last week of $400 million and $70 million for Kenmore and
the department store's home improvement business, respectively.
ESL hopes to have a final agreement as soon as Aug. 24, which would end
Sears' nearly two year search for a buyer. It is unclear if the Sears
special committee selling the businesses will accept Lampert's offer.
Lampert's strategy in bidding for the two businesses is to entice
another potential buyer to the table, according to a person familiar
with his thinking. Barring that, the goal is to help the 125-year-old
department store operator continue to fund its operations as it faces a
cash crunch, the source said.
But the government agency known as the Pension Benefit Guaranty
Corporation (PBGC) plans to use its right to effectively veto the
Kenmore sale in order to negotiate a share of the anticipated proceeds
from Sears, according to people familiar with the matter who requested
anonymity to discuss confidential deliberations.

A spokeswoman for the PBGC declined to comment on the sale of Kenmore,
known best for its refrigerators and washer and driers. But she said in
a prepared statement, "We continue to monitor Sears' financial
situation."
Sears declined to comment.
The PBGC move mirrors its own successful tactic last year with Sears,
when it won future cash payments from the company in exchange for
agreeing to the sale of Sears' Craftsman tool line.
The PBGC, funded in part by insurance premiums paid by companies, is
responsible for covering workers' pensions if their former employer
cannot. When companies face financial distress and are at risk of
leaving the agency with a pension funding gap to cover, the PBGC can
intervene to protect itself, pushing the employer to contribute more to
worker retirements.
The PBGC's stance could jeopardize Sears' efforts to raise money to stay
in business. The retailer, which also runs Kmart discount shops, is
burning through $1 billion to $1.5 billion annually, according to
analysts, as it struggles to compete with online retailers such as
Amazon.com Inc <AMZN.O> and discount chains including Walmart Inc <WMT.N>.
Sears has taken other measures to boost cash, inking a $425 million
credit card deal with Citigroup Inc <C.N> in May and selling $290
million in real estate in the first quarter.
Sears cautioned investors last year that it may not be able to carry on
as a going concern. The retailer, with $5.2 billion in borrowings on May
5, will aim to keep as much of the cash from the Kenmore sale as it can
to help make it through the holiday season, the people said.
Sears retirees' pensions face their own funding shortfall of $1.5
billion.

For a related graphic, click https://tmsnrt.rs/2OLl1fP
The PBGC now must strike a delicate balance between squeezing as much
cash from Sears upfront as it can to plug its pension funding gap,
without pushing the company into bankruptcy and jeopardizing any
prospect of future payments as well as the jobs of the company's 89,000
workers, the sources said.
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Sears Kenmore washing
machines are shown for sale inside a Sears department store in La
Jolla, California, U.S., March 22, 2017. REUTERS/Mike Blake

Sears has contributed over $4 billion to its pension over the last decade, but
this could be the PBGC's last chance to try to cover the shortfall it faces from
Sears. Following the upcoming wave of divestitures, Sears will be left with
assets including its battery label Diehard, roughly 100 Kmart and Sears stores
not already used to back debt, and auto centers and home services businesses, a
Fitch Ratings Inc analyst and sources said.
If "Sears gets to bankruptcy, there's a chance that all of the choice assets
will have already been sold," said Stephen Lubben, a Seton Hall law school
professor who specializes in bankruptcy. "The PBGC needs to keep their eye on
the sale proceeds."
The value of the remaining businesses and real estate has deteriorated as Sears
has struggled to turn a profit, the people said. Sears is now a shadow of its
former self, with a market capitalization of just $132 million, versus close to
$30 billion in 2007.
Lampert has invested and lent to Sears many times over the years, making him the
company's largest shareholder with a stake just shy of 50 percent, as well as
its biggest creditor, with about $2.1 billion owed to him or funds he controls.
PBGC STRATEGY
The PBGC plans to use its handling of the Sears sale of its tool line Craftsman
last year as a blueprint for its negotiations on Kenmore, the sources said.
Stanley Black & Decker Inc <SWK.N> moved forward with its $900 million
acquisition of Craftsman from Sears only after the PBGC gave its blessing, the
sources said.
In exchange, the PBGC won a $250 million payment, rights to a 15-year revenue
stream stemming from new sales of the tool line, and liens on $100 million of
the retailer's real estate.

The PBGC's claims to Craftsman, Kenmore, and Diehard came after Sears spun out
some of its real estate assets into a separate company, Seritage Growth
Properties <SRG.N>, in 2015 in a $2.7 billion deal.
The move in part led the agency to cut a deal with Sears giving it recourse to
the retailer's other assets, one of the sources said.
Selling Kenmore is part of Sears' transformation to an integrated online
retailer. But as Sears sells off its crown jewels, the PBGC's chances of being
repaid in full dwindle, leaving the agency to pick up the balance in a potential
future bankruptcy.
"When a company gets into financial trouble, creditors try to improve their
position, lending more money, giving more time, in exchange for a security
interest, a better chance to be repaid," said Lynn LoPucki, a University of
California, Los Angeles Law School professor, explaining that the PBGC has taken
this tactic. "We call this the dance of death."
(Editing by Greg Roumeliotis and Edward Tobin)
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