Regina Leader-Post

Sears Canada boss exits to launch bid for firm

- HOLLIE SHAW

TORONTO The executive chairman of Sears Canada has stepped down in order to focus on making a bid for the insolvent retailer, currently operating under court protection.

An internal employee memo Wednesday says Brandon Stranzl wants to keep the business operating as a going concern and intends to submit a bid for Sears or some of its assets under a court-approved sale and investment solicitati­on process (SISP), which has an Aug. 31 deadline.

Sears Canada filed for courtappoi­nted protection from its creditors in June under the Companies Creditors’ Arrangemen­t Act, announcing the closure of 59 stores and the layoffs of 2,900 of its 17,000 employees.

“The Board thought it was best for Brandon to focus exclusivel­y on putting the bid together and step away from the day-to-day operations of Sears Canada,” said the memo from Graham Savage, chair of the retailer’s special committee of the board of directors.

Becky Penrice, the retailer’s executive vice-president and chief operating officer, will now oversee the executive team, the note said. “The goal of any such proposal is to facilitate a path for Sears Canada to emerge from CCAA and so that all of us can continue with the company’s reinventio­n plans.”

Stranzl, who was not available for comment on Wednesday, “is still an employee and is still receiving his salary” during the process, Sears Canada spokesman Vincent Power confirmed.

Before the company announced the restructur­ing, Stranzl and his team had refashione­d part of Sears’s retail business to sell off-price merchandis­e in the vein of Winners and overhauled its IT and online shopping platform.

While it looked for a while as though Stranzl would square off in a bid for the retailer against two of Sears Canada’s biggest U.S.-based shareholde­rs, Sears Holdings CEO Edward Lampert and Fairholme Capital Management LLC, the two investors dropped an agreement to make a potential joint bid in late July.

Together, the two control about two-thirds of the retailer’s shares, and both said they would consider options independen­t of one another.

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