B&N stock a best seller on ‘private’ report
The plot thickens for Barnes & Noble.
Shares of the brick-and-mortar bookseller soared nearly 7 percent Thursday on a report that it was mulling going private — something that activist investor Sandell Asset Management would most surely support.
The New York-based bookseller denied a Wednesday report that it had retained Guggenheim Partners to help it explore a sale. The report by trade publication Deal Reporter also said B&N spoke to private equity firms Apollo Management and Platinum Equity.
“Although we have an obligation as a public company to listen to any proposals or offers from outside parties, we are not engaged in a process at this time,” B&N spokeswoman Mary Ellen Keating told The Post.
The bookseller’s denial didn’t stop the stock from rising: The shares ended up surging 6.9 percent, to $7.75.
B&N has used Guggenheim as its financial adviser for several transactions, including its $600 million spinoff of Barnes & Noble Education in August 2015.
The retailer recently attracted the attention of activist investor Thomas Sandell of Sandell Asset Management, which announced a “meaningful” stake of less than 5 percent in the company last month and prodded it to consider a sale.
In a troubled retail climate, analysts are hard-pressed to say who would buy it — despite speculation about Amazon, a buyout firm or even a billionaire bibliophile.
“Barnes & Noble would be an interesting asset for someone who loves books, but you’ve got to have a fundamental angle for how you’d run it better,” John Tinker, an analyst with Gabelli & Company told The Post.