Bangkok Post

Time running out for Sears, warns CEO

Lampert proposes plan to avoid bankruptcy

- MICHAEL CORKERY Lampert: Sears’ largest investor

NEW YORK: Time is running out for Sears, the retailer’s largest investor and chief executive officer warned on Monday.

With the company facing a large loan payment due next month, Edward Lampert, who serves as both Sears’ CEO and its most influentia­l shareholde­r and lender, said it needed to drasticall­y restructur­e its debts to avoid “alternativ­es.”

Those alternativ­es include bankruptcy. Lampert’s hedge fund, ESL Investment­s Inc, has proposed a series of deals that would reduce the retailer’s $5.6 billion debt load. They include selling off many of its remaining stores and asking lenders to exchange their loans for equity stakes in the beleaguere­d company.

ESL’s proposal, outlined in a securities filing on Monday, amounts to a wholesale financial restructur­ing of Sears outside a Chapter 11 bankruptcy filing.

If it is enacted, Sears’ debt would fall to about $1.2 billion, freeing up cash to be reinvested in its struggling retail operations.

While Sears has been troubled for years, ESL’s proposal signals an increased urgency from Lampert.

His firm is warning that Sears now faces “significan­t near-term liquidity constraint­s,” with $134 million in debt coming due in a few weeks.

It was not clear whether lenders would accept an offer to take an equity stake in the company because it is premised on a belief that Sears has a future in retailing.

Analysts say that is far from certain, as Sears keeps losing money and customers to more nimble and digitally adept competitor­s.

The latest rescue attempt is also complicate­d because ESL is controlled by Lampert, who has an unusual role at Sears.

He is its CEO and chairman, and in addition to being the largest shareholde­r. His hedge fund holds roughly 40% of Sears’s debt. This gives him claim on a great deal of the company’s assets, particular­ly its real estate.

A bankruptcy filing would probably reduce what Lampert could recover, as fees to lawyers and advisers eat into what is left over to pay him and other creditors.

Toys ‘R’ Us, which filed one of the largest retail bankruptci­es in history in September 2017, paid hundreds of millions of dollars in legal fees while being forced to liquidate all its US stores.

“Sears must act immediatel­y to have sufficient runway to continue its transforma­tion,” ESL said in its filing on Monday.

This is not the first time Lampert has sought to do a deal with a company where he holds significan­t sway.

Last month, ESL offered to buy Sears’ Kenmore brand for $400 million. A special committee of the retailer’s board is still reviewing that offer.

In his biggest deal, three years ago, he and other investors formed a real estate company called Seritage and paid $2.7 billion for about 235 Sears stores, including many in prime locations.

Many of those are being turned into upscale offices, condominiu­ms and restaurant­s, an investment that has been a boon for Lampert and other Seritage investors.

Real estate is a key component of Lampert’s latest idea. He proposes that Sears’ lenders — whose loans are secured by the company’s stores — stop collecting interest for a year while the company tries to sell those stores.

After a year, if Sears fails to sell enough stores to pay off $1.4 billion in debt, then it will sell the stores to the lenders for a price equal to the value of their debt.

Lampert has the most at stake. His hedge fund owns roughly $1.1 billion of Sears debt secured by stores, according to the securities filing.

“We are ready and willing to move as quickly as possible to help the company transform into a business that is better positioned to thrive in the 21st century,” ESL said in its proposal.

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