National Post (National Edition)

BILLIONAIR­E’S SEARS FIASCO IS FINALLY NEARING ITS LOGICAL END

- Katherine Burton, Lauren CoLeman-LoChner and eLiza ronaLds-hannon

Bit by bit, the smart money deserted Edward Lampert. Michael Dell, David Geffen, George Soros, the Ziff brothers — by 2012, all of them, and many more, had peeled away.

Not even Lampert’s friends could understand why the hedge-fund manager, once hailed as a young Warren Buffett, clung to his spectacula­rly bad investment in Sears, a dying department store chain.

Granted, other hedgefund titans have blown it, from Julian Robertson with US Airways to Bill Ackman with Herbalife.

But few have ridden a disaster so publicly, over so many years, with such an iconic brand. It was hubris, many now say, and a failure to follow the investor commandmen­t: get out in time.

Lampert, who lost many millions as Sears Holdings Corp. shares ground down to pennies, kept throwing the company lifelines. From the moment he bought into what was then called Sears, Roebuck & Co., he also manoeuvred to protect his financial interests. At times, he even made money. He closed stores, fired employees and, in what will surely be long remembered as the most unseemly element of the saga, carved out some choice assets for himself.

Until, at last, the reckoning. After 13 years under Lampert’s stewardshi­p, Sears finally seems to be hurtling toward bankruptcy, if not outright liquidatio­n.

And, once again, Wall Street is wondering what Eddie Lampert will salvage for himself and his $1.3-billion (all figures US) fund, ESL Investment­s Inc., whose future may now be in doubt.

“He’s been doing a lot of financial engineerin­g, but he’s just been moving around the deck chairs on the Titanic,” said Van Conway, a restructur­ing expert who worked on Detroit’s bankruptcy. “It looks like he’s played almost a full deck of cards by now.”

For years, bankruptcy court had been accepted by most everyone except Lampert as unavoidabl­e.

He refused to give in, proposing a plug-the-holes manoeuvre just two weeks ago, after years of machinatio­ns that kept the basic gears going even as the company was bleeding out.

At 56, he’s still a billionair­e. A Sears bankruptcy isn’t likely to change that for the chief executive officer and chairman.

Under the filing the company is said to be preparing for as soon as this weekend, he and ESL — together they hold almost 50 per cent of the shares—wouldbeatt­hehead of the line when the remnants are dispersed. As secured creditors, Lampert and the fund could get 100 cents on the dollar, along with others in the protected camp, including Wells Fargo & Co. and Citigroup Inc.

Lampert has manoeuvred out of tight spots before, most famously when he persuaded four men who kidnapped him in January 2003 to let him go after holding him for 30 hours, blindfolde­d and handcuffed, in a motel bathroom.

But saving sinking Sears required more than fast-talk.

His last idea was a debt restructur­ing that received little or no support from other creditors, who saw it as a scheme to allow ESL to be paid for Sears’s real estate, according to a person with direct knowledge of the situation. Part of this Lampert plan was to have unsecured creditors swap their debt for equity, a fool’s trade in the view of most analysts.

There’s no question Sears has cost him, and not only in reputation: He saw about $240 million worth of stock that he personally purchased evaporate as the shares tumbled. Another $287 million that he received in compensati­on has all but disappeare­d. ESL has lost $65 million just this year.

The hedge fund’s assets plummeted to around $1 billion from $15 billion in 2006 as the portfolio shrank from a half-dozen to the one massive crapshoot on Sears. The big-name investors exited, and so did Goldman Sachs Group Inc. clients who had come into ESL as part of a $3.5-billion capital raise in late 2007 and early 2008.

Still, as Sears’s major debt holder, with roughly half of the company’s $5.3-billion total, ESL saw a bit of upside, extracting more than $200 million in interest payments ayear.

And Lampert carved out what looked like — and in some cases might yet be — saves for himself, with spinoffs that gave him chunks of equity in new companies. One was Seritage Growth Properties, the real estate investment trust that counts Sears as its biggest tenant and of which Lampert is the largest shareholde­r; he created it in 2015 to hold stores that were leased back to Sears — cordoning those off from any bankruptcy proceeding. He and ESL got a majority stake in Land’s End Inc., the apparel and accessorie­s maker he split from Sears in 2014.

The Sears Canada Inc. gamble was a fumble; that spinoff began liquidatin­g one year ago. Lampert and ESL together had almost $300 million in that stock and both rode it to zero, though they did pocket $25 million in special dividends. Lampert is the chief shareholde­r in the Sears Hometown and Outlet Stores Inc., a stock that has tanked along with its former parent.

Over the years of propping Sears up, Lampert threw his own money into the effort, and his friends and supporters said this wasn’t only in self interest: He wanted to keep the lights on and people employed. He and ESL were willing to lend at much lower rates than others were demanding. He had Sears pay almost $2 billion into the unfunded pension plan in the past five years.

Nothing Lampert won out of Sears’s spinoffs was the result of special treatment, said Paul Holmes, a spokesman for ESL. “As we have said previously, the Land’s End and Seritage transactio­ns were carried out on transparen­t terms that delivered value to all Sears shareholde­rs and every shareholde­r had the same opportunit­y to participat­e.”

The defeat of a bankruptcy filing won’t dull Lampert’s passion, according to people close to him. He’ll continue to lead his low-key billionair­e life, reading, riding his racing bicycles and spending time on his 288-foot yacht. (Lampert named it The Fountainhe­ad, after the 1943 novel by Ayn Rand, whose books glorify individual­ism and the pursuit of riches.) And looking for deals.

It hasn’t been unusual for him to walk out in the middle of dinner parties organized by his wife to hunch over his phone or a computer in another room, according to people who have attended the events, and on occasion, he hasn’t shown up for the meal at all.

Lampert started ESL — for Edward Scott Lampert — in 1988 after three years at Goldman. Richard Rainwater, who oversaw the Bass brothers fortune, staked him $28 million to get going.

By the time he was 43, he was a billionair­e three times over. He hit home runs, the most impressive with the auto-parts retailer AutoZone and the car seller AutoNation Inc. His clients saw annualized returns of more than 20 per cent after fees until 2001. Even with the Sears fiasco, an investor who has been with Lampert from the beginning would now still be enjoying an annualized return of about 12 per cent.

He had what looked like another success on his hands in 2002, when he bought Kmart’s unsecured debt for around $700 million. Within two weeks, he’d orchestrat­ed the retailer’s exit from bankruptcy and emerged as its biggest shareholde­r.

Kmart was throwing off cash back then, and Lampert mastermind­ed the merger with Sears. It wasn’t immediatel­y a disaster, but losses started piling up.

Sears rolled through four CEOs in eight years, and Lampert took over in January 2013. But he shows up at the headquarte­rs outside Chicago only a few times a year.

He prefers to beam in from his office in Florida; while he still owns a home in Connecticu­t he lives most of the time in a $40-million estate on Indian Creek, an island in Key Biscayne that’s home to two dozen or so of Miami’s uber wealthy.

As he cut costs to the bone, he pitted executives against one another in a battle for scarce resources in a sort of a retail Hunger Games, people who worked for him said.

Perhaps his biggest misstep was thinking he could power through the recession. He had the opportunit­y to cancel a massive number of leases on Sears stores in the aftermath of the financial crisis, according to people familiar with the company. Instead, he renewed them.

Rainwater, who died in 2015, had pulled his money out of the fund when Lampert decided to move beyond picking stocks to takeovers and buyouts, thinking the young man wasn’t ready.

Part of it, Rainwater told the Wall Street Journal in 1991, was what he saw as the downside to Lampert’s exceptiona­l drive: “He’s so obsessed with moving in the direction he wants to move that people get burned, trampled on, run into.”

 ?? VINCENT LAFORET / THE NEW YORK TIMES FILES ?? Even friends of Edward Lampert could not understood why he couldn’t cut loose his investment in Sears.
VINCENT LAFORET / THE NEW YORK TIMES FILES Even friends of Edward Lampert could not understood why he couldn’t cut loose his investment in Sears.

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