Chattanooga Times Free Press

Department store chain Belk filing for Chapter 11 bankruptcy

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Belk, the North Carolina-based department store chain which has catered to generation­s of shoppers for nearly 190 years, announced Tuesday that it will file for Chapter 11 bankruptcy.

The chain’s owner, private equity firm Sycamore Partners, said in a news release that

Belk will continue with “normal operations” as it goes through bankruptcy.

Belk will continue to operate its Chattanoog­a stores at Hamilton Place and Northgate malls along with other stores in the region in Cleveland and Athens, Tennessee, and in Dalton, Georgia while it restructur­es its debt under bankruptcy court protection.

Sycamore Partners said it expects to emerge from bankruptcy by the end of February. It will

retain majority control of Belk, according to an agreement it reached with some of Belk’s creditors. A group of the department store’s creditors, led by the private equity firms KKR and Blackstone, will get a minority stake. The bankruptcy plan will help Belk shed about $450 million of debt.

“We’re confident that this agreement puts us on the right long-term path toward significan­tly reducing our debt and providing us with greater financial flexibilit­y to meet our obligation­s and to continue investing in our business,” Belk CEO Lisa Harper said in a statement.

The 133-year-old chain grew from the opening of a store in Monroe, North Carolina, by William Henry Belk in 1888. Three generation­s of the Belk family led the company to become the biggest family owned department store chain in the country by 2015, when the family sold it for $3 billion.

The sale to Sycamore loaded the chain with more than $2 billion in debt at a time when department stores were losing popularity. The department store has struggled during the coronaviru­s pandemic as customers flocked to online shopping and avoided in-person s hopping.

Belk furloughed workers in March as the pandemic hit and cut senior staff pay up to 50% as stores temporaril­y closed. In July, Belk cut an undisclose­d number of jobs, mostly at its headquarte­rs in Charlotte, North Carolina. That followed the eliminatio­n of 80 corporate jobs in February.

Belk has more than 20,000 employees at its nearly 300 stores in 16 Southeaste­rn states.

 ?? 2015 STAFF FILE PHOTO ?? Belk stores at Northgate, above, and Hamilton Place will continue to operate while the company goes through bankruptcy.
2015 STAFF FILE PHOTO Belk stores at Northgate, above, and Hamilton Place will continue to operate while the company goes through bankruptcy.

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