Toronto Star

Struggling Sears to borrow $300M

Retailer accepts loan after reporting $395M loss

- LAUREN COLEMAN-LOCHNER BLOOMBERG

Eddie Lampert, the hedge fund manager who runs Sears Holdings, is once again lining up financing for the money-losing retail chain.

Lampert’s ESL Investment­s offered to lend Sears $300 million (U.S.) this month and Sears accepted, the Hoffman Estates, Ill.-based company said in a statement Thursday. The loan is secured by a junior lien against Sears’s inventory, receivable­s and other working capital.

The announceme­nt follows another quarter of declining sales and red ink, renewing concerns about the once-mighty chain’s future. Sears lost $395 million, or $3.70 a share, in the period, compared with profit of $208 million, or $1.84 a share, a year earlier. The year-ago results were bolstered by the company’s $2.7-billion spinoff of properties into a real estate investment trust. Same-store sales dropped 5.2 per cent.

Lampert, Sears chief executive officer and biggest shareholde­r, has been selling assets and closing stores to limit the company’s continued cash burn. Sears also said in May that it would explore options for its Kenmore appliance, Craftsman tools and DieHard batteries brands. That would extend a string of transactio­ns, including the spinoff of the Lands’ End clothing unit and the bulk of its stake in Sears Canada.

Under ESL’s proposal, Sears can seek other investors to lend it as much as another $200 million on the same terms, Sears said. The financing is expected to close in seven to 10 business days.

The terms were approved by the related-party transactio­ns subcommitt­ee of the board, with advice from Centerview Partners and Weil Gotshal & Manges, the subcommitt­ee’s financial and legal advisers, according to the company.

Lampert has pledged to build a leaner retailer focused on selling through multiple channels. He’s invested heavily in the company’s digital and loyalty programs in a bid to cope with slowing mall traffic. But same-store sales, a common measure of performanc­e, haven’t stabilized, declining in every quarter but one since Lampert merged Kmart with Sears in 2005. The company has closed hundreds of stores and sublet some others to retailers such as Dick’s Sporting Goods Inc.

“The stores are incredibly large for what this has become, primarily because the sales per foot are so atrociousl­y weak,” McGinley said.

Sears has received interest from “a variety of potential partners” for Kenmore, Craftsman and DieHard brands, as well as the Sears Home Services business, the company said.

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