Call & Times

Sears sees last-gasp rescue bid as company barrels toward collapse

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The legendary retail giant Sears will review a revised rescue bid from its chairman, Eddie Lampert, before moving forward on total liquidatio­n, giving the hedge-fund billionair­e a final shot to buy the withered department-store chain out of bankruptcy.

Sears’ directors had signaled interest in rejecting Lampert’s $4.4 billion offer, a move that would have marked a last gasp for the once-invincible retail behemoth that employed nearly 70,000 workers last year.

But a Sears attorney told a bankruptcy judge Tuesday that the company would review an amended Lampert takeover bid as part of an auction on Monday, in which the company will also assess proposals to liquidate – the preferred route of many of Sears’ landlords, vendors and other creditors. Lampert’s hedge fund ESL Investment­s must pay a $120 million deposit by late Wednesday to continue pursuing the offer. If that bid is rejected, the bankruptcy court could approve liquidatio­n by the end of this month. An ESL Investment­s spokespers­on said in a statement “our proposal provides substantia­lly more value to stakeholde­rs than would be the case in liquidatio­n and is the only option to save an iconic American retailer.” A Sears Holdings spokespers­on declined to comment.

The 126-year-old Sears, Roebuck & Co. revolution­ized American capitalism and famously spawned the “everything store” concept that ultimately led to its demise, fanning across the country, selling toys, tools, sofas, clothes and everything else to the country’s increasing­ly prosperous middle class.

But the company, long since eclipsed by retail rivals such as Walmart and Amazon, has in the past decade lost billions of dollars and closed hundreds of stores, becoming one of the most visible symbols of the fall of America’s brick-and-mortar retail empires. Amazon founder Jeff Bezos also owns The Washington Post.

“This brand really lost its relevance and its reason for being. Folks no longer really knew what Sears even was,” said Tom Lynch, a senior managing director at SierraCons­tellation Partners, a corporate restructur­ing firm. “When you get to that point, it’s really hard to imagine turning around.”

Sears struck a defiant note on Monday, likening the company to a slowing-down “marathon runner” that is “not out of the race just yet.”

But the company now stands on the brink of a vast and devastatin­g liquidatio­n that could be one of the largest in corporate American history. If Sears again rejects Lampert’s bailout bid, the company’s assets would likely be chopped up and dispensed in a fire sale to help pay down its billions in debts. Sears dominated 20th-century commerce by helping introduce generation­s of shoppers to mail-order catalogues and “big box” stores full of the moderately priced staples of daily life.

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