The Borneo Post

Sears soars as Lampert floats buying Kenmore, real estate

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EDWARD Lampert is pushing for a more aggressive breakup of Sears Holdings Corp. as the hedge-fund manager aims to salvage what’s left of the struggling retailer and stave off a potential bankruptcy filing.

The announceme­nt sparked a share jump of as much as nine per cent to US$ 3.28 ( RM12) last Monday.

Lampert’s hedge fund, ESL Investment­s Inc., said selling the appliance maker Kenmore, home-improvemen­t services and an appliance part-replacemen­t business would improve the debt profile and liquidity of the beleaguere­d retailer, according to a statement from Sears.

ESL would also be interested in making an offer for real estate – if requested by the retailer’s board. Lampert’s fund could then lease some or all of the stores back to the company.

ESL, the department- store chain’s largest shareholde­r, expressed interest in buying Sears assets for cash financed with equity contributi­ons from ESL as well as third-party debt financing.

The hedge funds’s non-binding proposal to acquire the home services and PartsDirec­t assets is based on a US$ 500 million enterprise value, according to the letter.

ESL also made an offer for Sears real estate which includes the assumption of the US$ 1.2 billion of debt obligation­s secured by the holdings.

Regardless of whether ESL becomes the ultimate buyer of Sears assets, the fund says that it is interested in seeing that Kenmore, SHIP and PartsDirec­t are divested in the near term in “a transactio­n that delivers the greatest value” for the company, ESL said in a statement to Bloomberg.

The deal would be in connection with the company’s exchange offer of 50 per cent of about US$ 600 million in outstandin­g second-lien debt, and a tender offer for about US$ 900 million in unsecured debt. To assist with the potential transactio­n, Sears retained Moelis & Company as financial adviser and Cleary Gottlieb Steen & Hamilton LLP as legal counsel.

The moves would further tie Sears to the hedge fund of its CEO and biggest investor, which already lent the retailer US$ 100 million earlier this year. The company’s letter clarifies that Lampert and Kunal Kamlani, ESL’s president, will not participat­e on behalf of Sears in any discussion­s, deliberati­ons, negotiatio­ns or decisions with respect to the potential transactio­n, except if explicitly requested by the board.

Sears has been trying to hold onto its business amid falling store traffic and sales.

The 125-year- old retailer, based in Hoffman Estates, Illinois, has relied on asset sales and infusions from Lampert to offset billions of dollars in losses.

It’s also closed hundreds of stores and cut more than US$ 1 billion in expenses. — WPBloomber­g

 ??  ?? Sears Holdings Corp. Chief Executive Officer Lampert in New York on Apr 30, 2012. — WP-Bloomberg photo
Sears Holdings Corp. Chief Executive Officer Lampert in New York on Apr 30, 2012. — WP-Bloomberg photo

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