Sears, once a retail titan, files for Chapter 11
bankruptcy
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[October 15, 2018]
By Tracy Rucinski and Tom Hals
(Reuters) - Sears Holdings Corp filed for
Chapter 11 bankruptcy on Monday with a plan to close 142 more stores,
throwing into doubt the future of the century-old retailer that once
dominated U.S. malls but has withered in the age of internet shopping.
The Chapter 11 filing to reorganize debts of the parent of Sears,
Roebuck and Co and Kmart Corp follows a decade of revenue declines,
hundreds of store closures, and years of deals by billionaire Chief
Executive Officer Eddie Lampert in an attempt to turn around the company
he bought in 2004.
Lampert had pledged to restore Sears to its glory days, when it owned
the tallest building in the world and companies that included a radio
station and Allstate insurance.
But the company has not turned a profit since 2011, and critics say
Lampert let the stores deteriorate over the years, even as he bought the
company's stock and lent it money. It has sold off the legendary
Craftsman brand and is considering an offer from Lampert for the Kenmore
appliance name. For a graphic, click https://tmsnrt.rs/2A3giRQ
The company 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 bankruptcy filing was sparked by a standoff between Lampert, the
company's biggest shareholder and lender, and a special board committee,
over a rescue plan proposed by Lampert.
Under the bankruptcy plan, Lampert's executive role will be replaced by
a three-person committee, though he will remain as chairman of the
board. Mohsin Meghji, a managing director of the M-III Partners
corporate advisory firm, was appointed chief restructuring officer.
Shareholders generally lose their investment when a company files for
bankruptcy, and the fate of Sears itself will depend on the willingness
of creditors and suppliers to keep the company afloat.
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.
STORE CLOSURES, ASSET SALES
Sears said it will sell assets and begin closing 142 unprofitable stores
by year-end with the aim of reorganizing around a smaller platform of
around 700 of its best stores.
It is also weighing the sale of "a large portion" of its stores and said
they could be bought by Lampert's hedge fund in a bankruptcy auction.
Meanwhile, Sears and Kmart stores are open for business. The company
said it is continuing to pay employees' wages and benefits and is
working with its vendors to ensure its shelves remain stocked.
"The company believes that a successful reorganization will save the
company and the jobs of tens of thousands of store associates," Sears
said in a statement.
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A store closing sale
sign is posted next to a Sears logo in New Hyde Park, New York,
U.S., October 10, 2018. REUTERS/Shannon Stapleton
The retailer employed about 89,000 workers in the United States as of February,
compared with 246,000 people five years ago.
Sears said it has received a $300 million financing package to fund its
operations during the bankruptcy proceedings and was negotiating an additional
$300 million.
Sources told Reuters over the weekend that Lampert was expected to contribute
towards a financing package of between $500 million and $600 million.
Shares in Illinois-based Sears closed at about 41 cents on Friday, down from
over $100 in the years after hedge-fund star Lampert, once hailed as another
Warren Buffett, merged it with discount store Kmart in a $11 billion deal in
2005.
Sears dates back to the late 1880s and its mail-order catalogues with
merchandise from toys, medicine and gramophones to automobiles, kit houses and
tombstones made it the Amazon.com Inc of its time.
Chicago's Sears Tower was the world's tallest building when it was completed in
1973, but in the following decades consumers increasingly turned to e-commerce
and brick-and-mortar rivals such as Walmart Inc and Target Corp.
Lampert and his hedge fund ESL Investments Inc own just shy of 50 percent of
Sears' shares and are its biggest creditor, with about $2.5 billion owed to the
executive and funds he controls.
LAMPERT'S INVESTMENTS
One of the lingering questions for investors has revolved around the value of
Sears' assets, which include prime real estate.
The company sold 235 of its best stores for $2.7 billion to a Lampert-created
company, Seritage Growth Properties. Lampert also became Land's End Inc's
biggest shareholder when the clothing manufacturer was spun out of Sears in
2014.
Those deals could be subjected to new scrutiny by Sears' creditors in bankruptcy
court.
"When you go into a bankruptcy, you're living in a fish bowl and every
transaction will be looked at and examined," said Corali Lopez-Castro, Managing
Partner at law firm Kozyak Tropin & Throckmorton.
In an earlier attempt to avoid bankruptcy, Sears last year sold its Craftsman
tool brand to power tool maker Stanley Black & Decker for $900 million. It also
signed a deal to sell Kenmore appliances on Amazon.com.
(Reporting by Tracy Rucinski in Chicago and Tom Hals in Wilmington, Delaware;
Additional reporting by Rama Venkat in Bengaluru; Editing by Muralikumar
Anantharaman and Louise Heavens)
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