The Mercury News

TOYS ‘R’ US FILES FOR BANKRUPTCY

Company’s debt prevented it from competing with online retailers

- By Anne D’innocenzio and Bill Cormier

NEW YORK >> Toys ‘R’ Us, the toy retailer struggling with $5 billion in debt and intense online competitio­n, has filed for bankruptcy protection ahead of the key holiday shopping season — and says its stores will remain open for business as usual.

The company said the proceeding­s are a way for Toys ‘R’ Us to work with its creditors on restructur­ing the debt beleagueri­ng it. And it emphasized that its stores worldwide will serve customers while it works with suppliers and sells merchandis­e.

Filing for bankruptcy protection “will provide us with greater financial flexibilit­y to invest in our business ... and strengthen our competitiv­e position in an increasing­ly challengin­g and rapidly changing retail marketplac­e worldwide,” Chairman and CEO Dave Brandon said.

The move comes as retailers head into the busiest shopping time of year. The company said it was “well-stocked as we prepare for the holiday season and are excited about all of our upcoming in-store events.”

Retailers of all kinds are struggling. The Toys ‘R’ Us bankruptcy filing joins a list of at least 18 others since the beginning of the year — including shoe chain Payless Shoe Source, children’s clothing chain Gymboree and the True Religion jean brand — as people shop less in stores and more

online.

“Toys ‘R’ Us had little choice but to restructur­e and try to put itself on a firmer footing, said Neil Saunders, managing director of GlobalData Retail. However, he added, “even if the debt issues are solved, Toys ‘R’ Us still faces massive structural challenges against which it must battle.”

Toys ‘R’ Us, a major force in toy retailing in the 1980s and early 1990s, started losing shoppers to discounter­s like Walmart and Target and then to Amazon. GlobalData Retail estimates that in 2016 about 13.7 percent of toy sales were made online, up from 6.5 percent five years ago.

And children are increasing­ly moving more toward mobile devices as playthings. “For many children, electronic­s have become a replacemen­t or a substitute for traditiona­l toys,” Saunders said.

Toys ‘R’ Us has struggled with debt since privateequ­ity firms Bain Capital, KKR & Co. and Vornado Realty Trust took it private in a $6.6 billion leveraged buyout in 2005. The plan had been to take the company public, but that never happened because of its weak financial performanc­e.

With such debt levels, Toys ‘R’ Us has not had the financial flexibilit­y to invest in its business. Marc Rosenberg, a toy marketing executive, said Toys ‘R’ Us hasn’t been aggressive about building its online business, and let those sales migrate to rivals. And he says the company should have also thought of new ways to attract more customers in its stores, such as hosting birthday parties.

“Everyone is shopping online and using the store as a showcase,” he said.

Randy Watson of Fort Worth, Texas, used to pick up items at Toys ‘R’ Us for his kids. But now with his grandchild­ren, he uses the store to see what’s available and then shops elsewhere to get lower prices.

“We will go to Toys ‘R’ Us to check out the current toys, and while we are at the store, we will be looking up prices on the phone on Walmart.com and Amazon,” he said.

What he finds on the shelves might be a question. Jeffries analyst Stephanie Wissink said she expects that Toys ‘R’ Us suppliers, who were already shifting some of their orders to other stores amid talk there’d be a bankruptcy filing, will keep doing so. For most multinatio­nal toy suppliers, the Toys ‘R’ Us business roughly accounted for 10 percent of total sales, she said.

While toy sales overall have held up fairly well, they are shifting toward discounter­s and online companies. U.S. toy sales rose 6 percent last year on top of a 7 percent increase in the prior year, says NPD Group, a market research firm. That was the biggest increase since 1999 and was fueled by several blockbuste­r movies.

But for the first half of 2017, sales rose 3 percent. That puts more pressure on the later part of the year, when most toy sales occur, for the industry to meet NPD’s estimate for a 4.5 percent annual increase. Lego is laying off 1,400 workers after saying profits and sales dropped in the first half. And the nation’s two largest toy makers, Mattel and Hasbro, reported disappoint­ing second-quarter results.

Toys ‘R’ Us, based in Wayne, New Jersey, announced the filing late Monday. It said it was voluntaril­y seeking relief through the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the Eastern District of Virginia in Richmond, and that its Canadian subsidiary would be seeking similar protection through a Canadian court in Ontario as it seeks to reorganize.

The company said separate operations outside the U.S. and Canada are not part of the filings and its online sales sites worldwide remain open for business during the court-supervised process.

“The company’s approximat­ely 1,600 Toys ‘R’ Us and Babies ‘R’ Us stores around the world — the vast majority of which are profitable — are continuing to operate as usual,” the company statement said. “Customers can also continue to shop for the toy and baby products they are looking for online.”

Toys ‘R’ Us said it expects to continue honoring return policies, warranties and gift cards, and customer loyalty programs should stay the same.

The company has nearly 65,000 employees worldwide.

 ?? ALAN DIAZ — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Toys ‘R’ Us has filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection but will continue with normal business operations.
ALAN DIAZ — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Toys ‘R’ Us has filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection but will continue with normal business operations.

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