J.C. Penney files for bankruptcy protection
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[May 16, 2020] By
Mike Spector
NEW YORK(Reuters) - J.C. Penney Co Inc
filed for bankruptcy protection on Friday with plans to permanently
close some stores and also explore a possible sale, making it the latest
brick-and-mortar retailer to crumble as prolonged store closures in
response to the COVID-19 pandemic drive a final stake through
long-troubled businesses.
The U.S. department store chain, known for selling family apparel,
cosmetics and jewelry at roughly 850 locations, said it reached an
agreement with existing lenders for $900 million of debtor-in-possession
financing to aid operations while it navigates bankruptcy proceedings in
federal court in Corpus Christi, Texas.
The loan consists of $450 million in fresh financing, the company said.
The balance is made up of existing debt being "rolled up" to be given
the same legal status as the new funding that J.C. Penney obtained,
people familiar with the matter said. The retailer said it had an
additional $500 million in cash on hand before the bankruptcy filing.
While J.C. Penney plans to reorganize and emerge from bankruptcy
proceedings after eliminating several billion dollars of debt, it will
also explore a sale as part of the terms of its new financing, the
company said. Reuters earlier reported that the company was nearing a
bankruptcy filing and negotiating the financing.
The company on Friday said it would begin closing some stores
permanently in phases and would disclose further details in coming
weeks. People familiar with the matter previously told Reuters that the
company initially plans to permanently shutter roughly 200 stores,
saying the figure could fluctuate depending on negotiations with
creditors.
The bankruptcy filing caps a long decline for the 118-year-old
department store chain, which once operated more than 1,600 locations
that became fixtures in U.S. malls. The company at one point employed
nearly 200,000 people.
Even before the coronavirus outbreak, J.C. Penney was struggling with
nearly $4 billion of debt and pressure from both discount retailers and
e-commerce companies.
Larger retailers such as Walmart Inc and Target Corp have squeezed
smaller rivals by offering bargain-price apparel, including online.
IN THE FOOTSTEP OF OTHER BANKRUPTCIES
The coronavirus outbreak, which has resulted in more than 80,000 deaths
in the United States, is now forcing a financial reckoning among an
array of retailers that had to temporarily close their doors under
states' orders. Other retailers already grappling with customers'
abandonment of traditional stores for online shopping have also resorted
to bankruptcy filings.
Earlier this month, both luxury department store chain Neiman Marcus
Group and clothing retailer J. Crew Group Inc filed for bankruptcy
protection after alternative attempts to rework their finances failed.
Stage Stores Inc, a U.S. department store chain selling mid-priced
apparel at hundreds of stores in mostly rural areas, said earlier this
week it would liquidate unless it finds a buyer.
Like other retailers, J.C. Penney has started reopening its stores in
stages as many states have begun to loosen coronavirus restrictions. But
with U.S. unemployment now at the highest level since the Great
Depression of the 1930s, there are serious concerns that consumer
spending will remain dampened for a prolonged stretch.
Against that backdrop, J.C. Penney faced a looming $105 million debt
payment in June and $300 million of annual interest expenses. Adding to
pressure was an unprecedented span of lost sales and uncertainty whether
shoppers concerned about their health would return to stores.
J.C. Penney negotiated with creditors earlier this year for more
financial breathing room, hoping to give its new chief executive, Jill
Soltau, additional time to forge a turnaround focused on the company's
roots as a seller of affordable apparel for middle-class families. The
talks did not bear fruit.
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Shoppers enter and leave the J.C. Penney department store in North
Riverside, Illinois, U.S., November 17, 2017. REUTERS/Kamil
Krzaczynski/File Photo
The coronavirus crisis forced J.C. Penney to prepare for a bankruptcy filing to
address its strained finances, which on the horizon included more than $2
billion of debt coming due in 2023.
In March, the company drew down $1.25 billion from its credit line. It later
skipped debt payments, triggering grace periods to make good before defaulting
that expired this week. The company made one of those overdue payments before
filing for bankruptcy.
Under one plan being discussed, J.C. Penney would emerge from bankruptcy as two
separate companies, the sources said. One would own some of the company's real
estate and serve as a landlord to the other entity that would operate the
retailer's business, they said. Creditors, many of them Wall Street hedge funds,
would control the businesses in exchange for forgiving debt, they said.
The company earlier this month resolved a legal dispute with Sephora, the French
beauty chain owned by LVMH that had threatened to end its agreement to sell
cosmetics inside J.C. Penney stores.
Days before seeking bankruptcy protection, J.C. Penney paid nearly $10 million
in bonuses to top executives. The company said it was "taking necessary steps to
retain our talented management team," which made strides on the company's
turnaround plan before the COVID-19 pandemic.
FROM RURAL ROOTS TO U.S. MAINSTAY
James Cash Penney founded the eponymous retailer with partners in 1902. Averse
to the haggling that was common at the time, he believed prices should be low,
set and marked, an attitude that served as a precursor to modern shopping,
according to the J.C. Penney Museum in Hamilton, Missouri, the founder's
hometown.
The company's first store, opened in Wyoming, was called "The Golden Rule," a
reference to what the retailer viewed as its standard for customer service,
according to its website.
J.C. Penney stores initially dotted Main Streets in rural towns dominated by
farmers. After expanding to operate more than 30 stores, it went public in 1929.
By the 1970s, J.C. Penney had become a mainstay across the United States. The
following decade, it acquired a bank, and later drugstores before eventually
divesting both businesses.
The e-commerce revolution that took root in the 21st century rocked nearly every
corner of the traditional retail landscape and eroded J.C. Penney's business
much as it did those of its rivals. In recent years, J.C. Penney has closed
hundreds of stores and cut thousands of jobs.
The company has also faced fierce competition from discount chains including TJX
Cos Inc’s Marshalls and T.J. Maxx chains.
J.C. Penney suffered a significant setback after a failed transformation attempt
spearheaded by former CEO Ron Johnson, the one-time pioneer of Apple Inc's
retail stores. Johnson launched expensive renovations of J.C. Penney locations
and eliminated coupons, resulting in a customer backlash that led to plunging
sales. He was replaced in 2013.
Soltau took the reins in late 2018 after a revolving door of executives, and
attempted to return J.C. Penney to its roots as a seller of affordable apparel
for middle-class families. She jettisoned the company's appliance business and
mostly abandoned its furniture offerings.
(This story corrects date of company's public listing to 1929 from 1927 in
paragraph 21).
(Reporting by Mike Spector in New York; Editing by Leslie Adler)
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