Sears faces tough foe: an unforgiving bankruptcy code
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[October 16, 2018]
By Tom Hals and Nandita Bose
(Reuters) - When Sears Holdings Corp filed
for Chapter 11 bankruptcy on Monday, it said it would close another 142
unprofitable Sears and Kmart locations and seek to reorganize around
financially healthier stores. It also triggered a "time bomb" that
retailers have had a tough time surviving.
Over the last dozen or so years, bankrupt retailers have had less time
to make major strategic decisions for their survival and landlords and
lenders have had more leverage in the process.
The change stems from a 2005 legislative overhaul of the bankruptcy code
that forced companies to find an agreement within seven months on its
real-estate leases, or allow landlords to walk away from the agreement.
Previously, companies would spend a year or two working out a viable
survival plan.
Restructuring specialists blame the shorter timeframe for the rapid
liquidations of chains such as Circuit City, Linens 'n Things, the
Borders book store chain and Toys 'R' Us.
The law intensifies the pressure on Sears and Chairman Eddie Lampert to
restructure the company and turn it into a relevant, viable business.
"They have less money and a shorter period of time to make decisions,"
said Ted Gavin of the Gavin/Solmonese restructuring advisory firm.
"There's more transactional risk."
Sears did not respond to requests seeking comment. A spokesman for
Lampert declined to comment.
To be sure, jeans company True Religion Apparel Inc, Perfumania Holdings
Inc, Payless ShoeSource, Gymboree Corp and Harry & David in recent years
have all successfully navigated Chapter 11. They did so within the
tighter timeframe that Sears now confronts.
Many of the chains that successfully reorganized in recent years were
able to negotiate lower rent payments from landlords, who were willing
to work with a troubled company rather than risk finding another tenant
amid a surge of store closings.
On Monday, Reuters reported that many large U.S. malls and shopping
centers that are controlled by real estate investment trusts have waited
years for Sears' demise. They will now be able to raise rents on
contracts, some of which were signed more than 20 years ago.
Earlier in the day, a bankruptcy judge approved $300 million in
financing to keep Sears open through the holiday season. Sears is also
considering the sale of "a large portion" of its stores and said they
could be bought by Lampert's hedge fund in a bankruptcy auction.
Prior to 2005, retailers approached bankruptcy differently. Chains, such
as R.H. Macy & Co, would typically pile up cash at the year-end, seek
protection from creditors in January and then spend at least a year or
two working out a viable business plan.
After landlords complained to Congress about bankrupt "ghost tenants"
that tied up key locations in a mall or strip center, lawmakers
responded by adding the time limit on leases in the Bankruptcy Abuse
Prevention and Consumer Act of 2005.
This seemingly simple change has been blamed for plenty of failed retail
turnarounds and had an immediate impact on the length of cases.
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A derelict Sears store is seen in Santa Monica, California, United
States, October 15, 2018. REUTERS/Lucy Nicholson
Half of bankrupt retailers reorganized successfully prior to the 2005 law, but
just 12 percent did so afterwards, based on a 2014 study by Lawrence Gottlieb, a
bankruptcy lawyer with Cooley.
Gottlieb also found the average case was cut to three months from 12 months
prior to 2005 law. More and more retailers began liquidating, or quickly closing
weak stores and finding a buyer for the much smaller chain that emerged from
bankruptcy, something Sears is considering.
Lenders that provide money to carry a retailer through its restructuring have
been the drivers of the compressed timeframe for bankruptcies. Lenders generally
use a company's inventory as collateral, so they demand short cases to ensure
the inventory can be sold before the retailer is kicked out of its store
locations.
For example, Sears' lenders are providing $300 million for its restructuring and
demanded the company has a plan of reorganization approved by the bankruptcy
court in less than seven months.
One question is how well Sears and Kmart will manage to scrape by in the
forthcoming holiday season.
When Toys R Us went out of business earlier this year, its liquidation left a
large gap in the toy retail marketplace, which competitors like Walmart, Target
Corp and others rushed to fill.
Sears share of the overall retail industry has shrunk to about 0.4 percent from
5.4 percent a generation ago, said Craig Johnson, president of consultancy
Customer Growth Partners.
Appliances, electronics and home improvement products make up the bulk of Sears'
revenue and generated about $7.2 billion in annual sales last year.
According to a study led by UBS analyst Michael Lasser in February, some
appliance sales could leak to Amazon.com Inc as it now carries the Sears Kenmore
appliance range, he said.
Eighty percent of Sears stores are within a 15 minute drive of Home Depot,
Lowe's and Best Buy, and 71 percent of Kmart stores are located within 15
minutes of a Walmart Inc supercenter, he estimates. The retailer has shut down
several stores since then.
Todd Zywicki, a law professor at George Mason University Antonin Scalia Law
School, said getting ailing stores out of anchor locations and replacing them
with an exciting new concept benefits an entire shopping center.
"There was a built-in time bomb," he said of the 2005 law. He said a chain does
not need years to decide to keep a store location. "A lot of times you're
delaying the inevitable."
(Reporting by Tom Hals and Nandita Bose in New York, Additional reporting by
Melissa Fares in Bridgehampton, New York and Richa Naidu in Chicago, Editing by
Vanessa O' Connell and Neil Fullick)
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