Toronto Star

‘I deeply regret the failure’

Major Sears Canada investor Eddie Lampert offers some thoughts about store’s demise

- FRANCINE KOPUN BUSINESS REPORTER

U.S. hedge fund manager Eddie Lampert has something to say about the decline and fall of Sears Canada. Quite a lot, in fact. As a major investor in the company over the past13 years, in part through his hedge fund, ESL Investment­s, and through Sears Holdings Inc., of which he is chairman and chief executive officer, Lampert has been blamed for the failure of the department store chain in this country.

More than $600 million in dividends that were paid to Sears Canada shareholde­rs in 2012 and 2013 are under review as part of the insolvency process still winding its way through Ontario Superior Court after Sears stores closed for good in January.

In a Q&A with the Star today, Lampert discusses what he believes went wrong at Sears Canada, why it couldn’t be fixed and why paying dividends was sound business.

“There is a false narrative that somehow ESL made a lot of money on Sears Canada when, in fact, it has lost a significan­t amount,” he says.

“I deeply regret the failure of Sears Canada and the impact it has had on the lives of its employees,” he writes.

“I know on a very personal level what it’s like to have somebody depend on a company to provide for her family. I know what it’s like to have a parent who has to live with the uncertaint­y of whether or not they are going to keep their job in order to pay their bills, because after my father died when I was 14, my mother worked at Saks Fifth Avenue for 20 years. The caricature that some have tried to create out of me is particular­ly hurtful and the complete opposite of how I have approached my 30year investment career and my involvemen­t with Sears Canada.”

 ??  ?? Eddie Lampert, left, has been blamed for Sears Canada’s failure.
Eddie Lampert, left, has been blamed for Sears Canada’s failure.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada