San Diego Union-Tribune

J.C. PENNEY FREED FROM BANKRUPTCY

Sale of retail operations to landlords Simon and Brookfield is complete

- BY RICK GREEN & JEREMY HILL

The J.C. Penney department store chain is back — smaller but more solvent — just in time for the holiday sales extravagan­za and the worst of the coronaviru­s pandemic.

The chain completed its previously announced sale of the retail operations to Simon Property Group Inc. and Brookfield Asset Management Inc., according to a Monday statement. It’s the first step in a process that splits J.C. Penney into two parts, an operating company led by its mall landlords and a property company owned by its lenders.

The operating company has been freed from Chapter 11 bankruptcy court supervisio­n. The property group will need until sometime in next year’s first half to finish getting organized, J.C. Penney said.

“We have always been firm believers in J.C. Penney, and are very pleased to help preserve this iconic institutio­n and save tens of thousands of jobs,” said David Simon, chief executive officer of the self-named property company.

The retailer is still led by Chief Executive Officer Jill Soltau, who was hired in 2018 and was in the middle of crafting a turnaround plan when COVID-19 broke out this year and shut the stores. By mid-May, J.C. Penney was bankrupt.

For years, the chain had suffered from too much debt and lackluster sales as shoppers defected to specialty and online sales. The court-supervised reorganiza­tion gives Soltau a second chance to see if her plan works.

“The brand still has value and Soltau’s initiative­s are on the mark to improve results,” said Poonam Goyal, who follows the retail industry for Bloomberg Intelligen­ce. “Debt was its biggest issue, so if it can start with a clean slate, the retailer can find ways to reclaim itself.”

The turnaround likely includes shutting or shrinking some stores, Goyal said. Capital expenditur­es were cut significan­tly to preserve cash, but now spending needs to accelerate, especially on digital, she said.

Stability rather than growth may be the best Soltau can achieve, according to Jan Rogers Kniffen, a former department store executive and founder of the consulting firm that bears his name.

“They’ve certainly lost a lot of market share already and will continue to shed more,” Kniffen said before the announceme­nt. “It all makes sense, I just don’t see this changing the real fate of J.C. Penney as someone who is shrinking in relevance to the customer. That doesn’t mean they can’t stabilize, manage the business and operate it.”

“All the data suggests that when a retailer files for Chapter 11, it is more likely than not that the case ends in a liquidatio­n,” Josh Sussberg, the Kirkland & Ellis bankruptcy lawyer representi­ng J.C. Penney, said during a Nov. 24 court hearing. Given the pandemic shutdown and cash burning away at about $50 million per month earlier this year, Sussberg said, “Chapter 11 was not simply an option — it was the only way this company could potentiall­y survive.”

The outcome also benefits the mall owners buying the operating company, according to Kniffen.

“They basically got a low-cost option on what they can do with all those J.C. Penney properties,” he said, and it’s good for the other retail tenants, too. “If you’re in that mall, you’re certainly better off with J.C. Penney operating than with a dark box.”

Vendors also stand to gain. “I’m sure suppliers are happy that there is a still this big customer to sell into in the future, but there are still concerns about the credit profile of the go-forward company,” said Dennis Cantalupo, who runs Pulse Ratings. “There’s the question, have they fixed enough of their problems?”

 ?? LM OTERO AP ?? Simon Property Group and Brookfield Asset Management have bought J.C. Penney retail operations. It’s the first step in a process that splits J.C. Penney into two parts.
LM OTERO AP Simon Property Group and Brookfield Asset Management have bought J.C. Penney retail operations. It’s the first step in a process that splits J.C. Penney into two parts.

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