Waterloo Region Record

Lampert buoys Sears with plan to sell Kenmore assets offered years ago

- LAUREN COLEMAN-LOCHNER AND KATHERINE DOHERTY

If the news that Sears Holdings Corp. is exploring the sale of assets including Kenmore sounds familiar, it’s not in your head: Chief Executive Officer Edward Lampert has been peddling the same goods for years.

The retailer said Monday it had formally started a process to shop the Kenmore appliance brand and parts of its home services business — units it hired Citigroup and LionTree Advisors to explore selling two years ago.

Sears shares spiked as much as 19 per cent in intraday trading to the highest level in five months. But investors shouldn’t have been caught off guard by the news: Lampert’s hedge fund, ESL Investment­s Inc., said in April it would be open to buying the assets and urged the store to put the businesses on the block.

“I don’t know why there is any surprise,” said Noel Hebert, a Bloomberg Intelligen­ce analyst. “Not only have they been shopping the assets for years, but could there have been any doubt this would happen after ESL put forth the request and what amounts to an out-of-court stalking horse bid for some of them?”

Offloading the assets would help replace cash consumed by the retailer’s struggling operations. The once-dominant chain has spent more than a decade trying to restore its former glory. For years, Lampert has used his own money to keep Sears afloat. The company has closed hundreds of stores and shaved more than $1 billion from annual expenses.

“Perhaps the shares are rallying on the prospect that this signals a beginning of the end and, in turn, limits the amount of enterprise value that is getting bled out via operating losses,” Hebert said.

Sears posted a rare quarterly profit in March after a tax benefit, yet it’s spending prodigious amounts of cash. The retailer’s operations burned through about $1.8 billion in the 12 months ended Feb. 3, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.

To shore up operations, Lampert’s put a succession of assets up for sale, often spinning them off or withdrawin­g them when a deal didn’t materializ­e. The sale of its Craftsman tool brand last year to Stanley Black & Decker Inc. was a rare example of a consummate­d sale. In contrast, Sears has spun off its Lands’ End brand, smaller-format Hometown and Outlet Stores unit and now-defunct Canadian business.

Most notably, in 2015 the retailer said it was separating about 250 properties to form Seritage Growth Properties, a real estate investment trust. It was the promise of the company’s real estate value that pushed shares above $100 in the years following Lampert’s 2005 combinatio­n of Sears, Roebuck and Kmart. The shares erased year-to-date losses on Monday, climbing as high as $4.08.

As a backstop, Lampert’s fund emerged last month as an interested buyer for the assets, which also includes Sears Home Improvemen­t Products. The firm didn’t indicate what sort of price the Kenmore brand could fetch.

“Our principal interest is seeing that Kenmore, SHIP and PartsDirec­t are divested in the near term in a transactio­n that delivers the greatest value for Sears, regardless of whether ESL or a third party is the ultimate buyer,” the fund said in a statement to Bloomberg. “We are very enthusiast­ic about our ownership interest in Sears and its future, and will remain so whether or not a transactio­n is consummate­d.”

Sears has formed a special committee, which consists only of independen­t directors, to evaluate ESL’s proposal, solicit thirdparty interest in the assets and explore “any other alternativ­es with respect to the sale assets that may maximize value for the company,” the Hoffman Estates, Illinois-based retailer said in a statement. It’s retained Centerview Partners to serve as its investment banker and Weil, Gotshal & Manges as its legal counsel.

If Sears is able to find interested buyers and the sale process is followed by a comprehens­ive reorganiza­tion of debt, it could be positive for creditors, Hebert said. Right now “there is still just enough value in the estate to cover creditors, but cash burn is their enemy.”

A quick deal may be key, Hebert said. “When you’ve got assets tied to a business in perpetual decay, selling now is almost certainly better than selling later.”

 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? In a move announced Monday, Sears Holdings Corp. says a special committee of its board is starting a formal process to explore the sale of its Kenmore brand and related assets.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO In a move announced Monday, Sears Holdings Corp. says a special committee of its board is starting a formal process to explore the sale of its Kenmore brand and related assets.

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