Analysis-Kohl's snub of big sale-leaseback sets up new clash with hedge
funds
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[November 22, 2022] By
Abigail Summerville and Svea Herbst-Bayliss
(Reuters) - Kohl's Corp's reluctance to sell much of its real estate and
then lease it back has set up the U.S. department store operator for a
new confrontation with hedge funds.
Macellum Capital Management LLC and Ancora Advisors LLC are among hedge
funds that have been pressuring Kohl's to cash out on assets and return
money to shareholders after launching challenges in the last two years
that led to three newcomers joining the company's board.
The stakes are high. Kohl's shares are down 37% year-to-date, double the
drop of the broader stock market, as investors fret over its plummeting
sales after the Menomonee Falls, Wisconsin-based company unsuccessfully
tried to sell itself in the first half of 2022.
Kohl's, whose chief executive Michelle Gass announced this month she is
leaving to join jeans maker Levi Strauss & Co, could be the target of
another proxy contest at its annual shareholder meeting next spring
unless it can turn its fortunes around, Morningstar analysts wrote last
week.
Sale-leasebacks allow retailers to raise capital without shedding stores
by selling the underlying real estate and turning them from landlords
into tenants. Proponents of this strategy argue the move can unlock
hidden value in the company. Critics say the assumed leases are another
form of debt that make a company's finances more onerous. They also
point out that companies often spend the money on share buybacks and
dividends rather than investing in their business.
Kohl's defied Macellum and Ancora last week when its chief financial
officer Jill Timm said on the third-quarter earnings call that the
company would continue to evaluate potential sale-leasebacks but would
not engage in any "transformative transaction." She cited "the market
volatility and current rate environment", without elaborating.
The reason that Kohl's board decided against a big sale-leaseback was
that it was concerned about the financial impact it would have on its
financial health, according to people familiar with the matter who
requested anonymity to discuss the deliberations. The board directors
who carried out the review were worried that the company's slump in
sales would make it risky to add to its liabilities, the sources added.
Spokespeople for Kohl's, Macellum and Ancora declined to comment.
S&P cut Kohl's credit rating to junk in September, highlighting the
precarious state of its finances. This happened after its net sales
dropped 51% to $3.9 billion in the second quarter, as shoppers snubbed
it in favor of discount chains and online retailers. Its debt pile as of
the end of October stood at $1.5 billion.
Private equity firm Oak Street Real Estate Capital LLC made an offer in
September to acquire as much as $2 billion of property from Kohl's and
have the U.S. retailer lease back its stores, Reuters reported at the
time. It is not clear how many of Kohl's 1,100 stores would have been
involved in any deal.
It is still possible that Kohl's, which is in the process of finding a
new chief executive, engages in a limited number of sale-leasebacks, as
it has done previously. In 2020, it sold and then leased back two San
Bernardino fulfillment and distribution centers, pocketing $193 million
after fees which it used to shore up its cash position.
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The sign outside a Kohl's store is seen
in Broomfield, Colorado February 27, 2014. REUTERS/Rick Wilking/File
Photo
At a Goldman Sachs industry conference in September, Timm said the
San Bernardino sale-leasebacks were attractive because the leases
had a short term of five years that gave it flexibility should its
circumstances change. She would not want to take on a 20-year lease
as some in the industry do, she added.
"Who knows what in 20 years retail is going to look like. I want to
make sure that I do a deal that gives us the financial flexibility
to run this company for the long term," Timm said.
Timm added that the 4.5% cap rate on the San Bernandino deal -- a
measure of its cost -- was more financially advantageous than a bond
Kohl's issued during the COVID-19 pandemic.
RENT EXPENSES
In a letter to shareholders in March defending its strategy against
criticism from hedge fund Macellum Capital Management LLC, Kohl's
said that a "large" sale-leaseback would "negatively impact margins
by adding unnecessary rent expenses in perpetuity and risk Kohl's
investment-grade rating".
It pointed to the example of retailer Big Lots Inc, which under
pressure from Macellum and other hedge funds took on 15-year and
20-year leases for four distribution centers, raising $725 million
only to see its operating margins plummet afterwards.
Big Lots did not respond to a request for comment.
In another example of sale-leasebacks adding to a retailer's
financial woes, Bed Bath & Beyond Inc raised $250 million with sale-lasebacks
for its stores, a distribution facility and office space, only to
subsequently face a liquidity crunch and scramble to find ways to
get out of leases.
Bed Bath & Beyond did not respond to a request for comment.
There are, however, examples of companies, such as Life Time Fitness
and Walgreens Boots Alliance Inc, that carry out sale-leasebacks
without burdening their finances. These tend to be smaller deals
relative to their size that allow them to earn greater returns in
their business than they do in real estate.
"Generally speaking, I believe a stable retailer with stable
management, looking out for the long-term performance of the
business, is far better off controlling its destiny than being
subject to the vagaries of leaseback arrangements," said Mark Cohen,
director of retail studies at the Columbia Business School.
(Reporting by Abigail Summervile in New York and Svea Herbst-Bayliss
in New York; Editing by Greg Roumeliotis and Nick Zieminski)
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