Chicago Sun-Times

SEARS SAVED BY LAMPERT’S BID, BUT LONG-TERM OUTLOOK SHAKY

- BY ANNE D’INNOCENZIO AP Retail Writer

NEW YORK — Sears will live on — at least for now.

Its chairman and biggest shareholde­r, Eddie Lampert, won tentative approval for a $5 billion plan to keep the ailing, 132-year-old department-store chain in business, fending off demands from creditors that it throw in the towel, according to a person familiar with the negotiatio­ns. The person was not authorized to discuss the matter and spoke on condition of anonymity Wednesday.

Lampert, the hedge fund owner who steered Sears into Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection in October, is aiming to keep open roughly 400 stores and preserve tens of thousands of jobs.

But how long Sears can survive under the 56-year-old billionair­e, who has tried and failed to turn it around many times before, remains an open question.

The company that was once the Amazon of its day, selling everything from girdles to snow tires, still faces cutthroat competitio­n from the likes of Amazon, Target and Walmart. Its stores are looking drab and old. And Lampert has yet to spell out how he plans to change the company’s fortunes.

“While there’s no doubt that a shrunken Sears will be more viable than the larger entity, which struggled to turn a profit, we remain extremely pessimisti­c about the chain’s future,” said Neil Saunders, managing director of GlobalData Retail.

“In our view, Sears exits this process with almost as many problems as it had when it entered bankruptcy protection. In essence, its hand has not changed, and the cards it holds are not winning ones.”

Sears’ Hoffman Estates-based corporate parent, which also owns Kmart, had 687 stores and 68,000 employees at the time of its bankruptcy filing. At its peak in 2012, its stores numbered 4,000.

The company hasn’t had a profitable year since 2010 and has suffered 11 straight years of declining sales.

At a bankruptcy auction this week in New York, Lampert won the OK from a subcommitt­ee of the Sears board for a rescue plan financed through an affiliate of his hedge fund ESL.

Many of Sears’ unsecured creditors, who rank at the bottom of the list to be paid and include merchandis­e suppliers and landlords, had pressed for liquidatio­n, contending the business was worth more dead than alive. They also questioned the propriety of certain deals Lampert has done at Sears.

Lampert’s rescue plan still needs approval from a bankruptcy judge in White Plains, New York. A hearing is set for Feb. 1. Creditors will have the opportunit­y to object before then. The specific terms of the bid haven’t been made public.

Lampert personally owns 31 percent of the Sears’ outstandin­g stock, and his hedge fund has an 18.5 percent stake, according to FactSet.

Sanjay Singh was recently shopping with his wife at the Newport Centre Mall in Jersey City, New Jersey, and stopped by a Sears to look for a swimsuit for his 11-year-old daughter. He said he usually shops at places like Macy’s and J.C. Penney because they have a better assortment of merchandis­e and the quality is also better.

“Sears is usually my last option,” he said.

 ?? SETH WENIG/AP ?? Shoppers outside a Sears store in Hackensack, New Jersey, this month. The Sears rescue plan from Chairman Eddie Lampert still needs approval from a bankruptcy judge.
SETH WENIG/AP Shoppers outside a Sears store in Hackensack, New Jersey, this month. The Sears rescue plan from Chairman Eddie Lampert still needs approval from a bankruptcy judge.
 ??  ?? Eddie Lampert
Eddie Lampert

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