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						Sears Chair Lampert makes $4.4 billion bid to keep 
						retailer alive
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		 [December 29, 2018]   
		By Mike Spector, Jessica DiNapoli and Harry Brumpton 
 (Reuters) - Sears Holdings Corp Chairman 
		Eddie Lampert submitted a $4.4 billion takeover bid for the bankrupt 
		U.S. retailer, representing its only chance of escaping liquidation and 
		laying off tens of thousands of workers, a spokesman for the 
		billionaire's hedge fund said on Friday.
 
 Lampert's bid is backed in part by $1.3 billion in financing from three 
		different financial institutions, the spokesman for his hedge fund, ESL 
		Investments Inc, said. It would preserve about 425 stores that Sears has 
		yet to close, and secure the jobs of up to 50,000 workers out of the 
		68,000 employed by the retailer. An affiliate of ESL, Transform Holdco 
		LLC, submitted the bid, the spokesman said.
 
 People familiar with the matter said the financing comes from Sears' 
		existing lenders Bank of America Corp and Citigroup Inc, as well Royal 
		Bank of Canada, which was not previously a lender, which together agreed 
		to provide a $950 million asset-based loan and a $350 million revolving 
		credit line.
 
 Some of Lampert's bid relies on $1.8 billion of Sears debt that ESL 
		already holds and plans to forgive to back the offer, the sources said. 
		The bid also includes about $400 million in financing from non-bank 
		lenders, the sources said.
 
		
		 
		The bid contemplates assuming protection agreements Sears has previously 
		sold to reassure customers who have bought appliances, televisions, lawn 
		tractors and other big-ticket items, the ESL spokesman said.
 "Factoring for all considerations, we believe that our going concern bid 
		provides the best path forward for the company, the best option to save 
		tens of thousands of jobs and is superior for all of Sears’ stakeholders 
		to the alternative of a complete liquidation," the ESL spokesman said. 
		"Much work remains and there is no assurance our proposal will be 
		completed."
 
 Sears will now evaluate the bid to determine whether it is viable, and 
		there remains a possibility the company could reject it, some of the 
		sources said.
 
 A Sears spokeswoman declined to comment. Bank representatives either had 
		no immediate comment or did not immediately respond to requests for 
		comment.
 
 A U.S. bankruptcy court judge must approve any sale of Sears. The judge 
		will weigh the opinions of other stakeholders, including unsecured 
		creditors who have argued they could recover more of their investment if 
		the department store operator winds down.
 
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			A Sears logo is seen inside a department store in Garden City, New 
			York, U.S., May 23, 2016. REUTERS/Shannon Stapleton 
            
			 
Without the financing or another buyer, Sears faces the prospect of closing its 
doors for good and putting roughly 68,000 people out of work.
 The 125-year-old retailer filed for bankruptcy on Oct. 15 and developed plans to 
restructure around the sale of 500 stores and businesses including Kenmore, 
DieHard and the company's home services division. Only Lampert's ESL offered to 
buy the entire company.
 
 The only other bids Sears has received are from suitors interested in pieces of 
the company and liquidators prepared to run going-out-of-business sales at 
stores and shut down the retailer.
 
 Sears dates back to the late 1880s. Its mail-order catalogs with merchandise 
ranging from toys, medicine and gramophones to automobiles, kit houses and 
tombstones made it the Amazon.com Inc of its time.
 
 But the iconic retailer gradually lost its shine as consumers increasingly 
favored brick-and-mortar rivals such as Walmart Inc and Target Corp and 
e-commerce.
 
 Lampert, who through ESL is Sears' biggest shareholder and creditor, formed 
Sears Holdings in 2005 by acquiring Sears Roebuck in an $11 billion deal and 
combining it with discount chain Kmart, which he had also taken over.
 
 Lampert had pledged to restore Sears to its glory days, when it owned the Sears 
Tower in Chicago, then the world's tallest building, and companies that included 
a radio station and Allstate insurance. But the company stopped turning a profit 
in 2011, and it gradually started to sell assets, such as its legendary 
Craftsman brand and many of its properties, to stay afloat.
 
 Sears Holdings listed $6.9 billion in assets and $11.3 billion in liabilities in 
documents filed in the U.S. Bankruptcy Court in the Southern District of New 
York.
 
 The largest U.S. toy retailer, Toys ‘R’ Us, tried to emerge from its 2017 
bankruptcy filing but was forced to liquidate six months later after creditors 
lost confidence in its turnaround plan.
 
 (Reporting by Mike Spector and Harry Brumpton in New York, Jessica DiNapoli in 
Puerto Rico; Editing by Leslie Adler)
 
				 
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