USA TODAY US Edition

Toys R Us to workers: We’ll close all stores

Company files liquidatio­n papers; court hearing scheduled for Thursday

- Joan Verdon and Charisse Jones

Toys R Us told employees on Wednesday that it is planning to sell or close all of its U.S. stores and that it will file liquidatio­n papers in advance of a court hearing scheduled for Thursday afternoon.

The company confirmed a Wall Street Journal report that Chief Executive Dave Brandon had shared the news with employees in a conference call. A spokeswoma­n for Toys R Us said Brandon told employees it was a sad day and that customers and others would be sad to see the brand disappear.

The decision to liquidate the company might not be the final chapter if a buyer surfaces who wants to buy some of the stores and operate them as an ongoing business. Many in the toy business believe there is room for a smaller version of Toys R Us.

Reports that Toys R Us was head- ing for a complete liquidatio­n of its U.S. operations have been circulatin­g for the past two weeks, with major news outlets citing sources familiar with the negotiatio­ns to keep the retailer alive.

In January, Toys R Us announced plans to close up to 182 of its U.S. stores. It began going-out-of-business sales at those stores in February. In the weeks that followed, reports from sources about the retailers situation got progressiv­ely worse, with insiders saying that vendors were not being paid and that employees were worried the company couldn’t meet its payroll.

For most of its 70-year history, Toys R Us was the company that put other toy chains out of business. It outlasted KB Toys, Zany Brainy and Noodle Kidoodle. It bought, and later sold, FAO Schwarz.

But it rested on its laurels for too long, missing the sea change that Amazon was bringing to the retail

industry, and ultimately it was felled by many of the same problems plaguing other traditiona­l retail chains — too many stores, too large and outdated for the digital age — coupled with the more singular problem of a mountain of debt that it struggled to pay back.

Toys R Us shuttered dozens of stores as it attempted to deal with close to $5 billion in debt that resulted from a leveraged buyout in 2005.

That buyout, by private equity investors Bain Capital and KKR and real estate trust Vornado, saddled Toys with crushing interest payments amounting to $400 million a year, just as the economy was entering its worst downturn since the Great Depression.

It was a steep fall for the retailer that grew out of a children’s furniture store founded in 1948 by returning World War II vet Charles Lazarus. In 1957, Lazarus began opening toy superstore­s just as television was taking off, driving demand for TV-advertised hits such as Slinkys and Barbie dolls.

Toys R Us became a powerhouse, the dominant big-box toy store. But it began to falter as retailers such as Walmart and Target began to move more aggressive­ly onto its turf, offering toys, typically at lower prices to woo shoppers who might then fill their carts with their other, higher-priced products.

Bain, KKR and the executives put in place to turn Toys around after its buyout believed it would be relatively simple to get the retailer in good enough shape to launch a stock offering within three years and reap a healthy return on their investment. They expected they could cut costs and boost sales with more efficient management and better marketing.

But Toys R Us was plagued by mis- steps. It even tried to partner with Amazon to run its fledgling e-commerce operations at one point, but that move proved to be a tactical mistake, helping to turn Amazon into a fierce competitor who had learned how to beat Toys R Us by undercutti­ng it on price.

Even in years when Toys R Us performed well, its massive debt payments ate into its profits and kept the company from investing in muchneeded improvemen­ts to its stores and its online operations.

When the company filed for bankruptcy protection in September, CEO Dave Brandon promised the bankruptcy court that “Toys R Us is here to stay.” Receiving debtor-in-possession financing and bankruptcy protection, Brandon said, would “ensure the iconic Toys R Us brand stays viable for years to come.”

Verdon writes for The (Bergen County, N.J.) Record; Jones writes for USA TODAY

 ?? DANIEL LEAL-OLIVAS/AFP/GETTY IMAGES ?? Many in the toy business believe there is room for a smaller version of Toys R Us.
DANIEL LEAL-OLIVAS/AFP/GETTY IMAGES Many in the toy business believe there is room for a smaller version of Toys R Us.
 ?? ALAN DIAZ/AP ?? Toys R Us became a big-box toy store powerhouse, but it began to falter as retailers such as Walmart and Target began to move more aggressive­ly onto its turf.
ALAN DIAZ/AP Toys R Us became a big-box toy store powerhouse, but it began to falter as retailers such as Walmart and Target began to move more aggressive­ly onto its turf.

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