BusinessMirror

Sears said to prepare for possible liquidatio­n as ESL bid fails

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SEARS Holdings Corp. is preparing to potentiall­y wind down the iconic retailer after Chairman Eddie Lampert’s bid to buy several hundred stores out of bankruptcy fell short of bankers’ qualificat­ions, according to people with knowledge of the matter.

The retailer started laying the groundwork for a liquidatio­n after a series of meetings on Friday when its advisers weighed the merits of a $4.4-billion bid by Lampert’s hedge fund to buy Sears as a going concern, said the people, who asked not to be identified because the discussion­s are private.

While Lampert’s ESL Investment­s has failed to convince the bankers of the viability of its bid, it could still make last-minute improvemen­ts before a status hearing on Tuesday. Lampert also has outlined a back-up plan in which ESL would pursue the purchase of some of Sears’s parts, including real estate and intellectu­al property, such as its brand.

Spokesmen for Sears and ESL declined to comment, as did a representa­tive for Lazard, which is advising Sears.

The retailer, which includes its namesake department stores and the Kmart chain, entered Chapter 11 protection in October with the hope that it could emerge from bankruptcy with less debt and a smaller group of more profitable stores. The bid Lampert submitted in late December intended to keep 425 stores open, while preserving up to 50,000 jobs.

But as representa­tives for the company—along with creditors and other parties—met in New York on Friday to assess the merits of the bid, they found a number of shortcomin­gs, people with knowledge of the discussion­s said.

Gaps remained in some of the financing for the proposal, and the plan wouldn’t have provided enough cash to cover costs incurred in the bankruptcy, the people said; it also undervalue­d inventory and other assets relative to what liquidator­s were promising to pay.

Another key sticking point: Much of Lampert’s bid rested on his getting ownership of the reorganize­d business in exchange for the forgivenes­s of $1.3 billion of debt he holds. But the validity of those very claims— racked up in a series of spinoffs, refinancin­gs and other transactio­ns—has already been challenged by a group of creditors. The ESL plan didn’t include a cash backstop for that part of the bid.

ESL has said its liens are valid and came after the firm extended more than $2.4 billion of secured financing to keep Sears afloat.

Lampert’s bid included a secondary proposal were the going-concern offer to fall through. It included buying selected real estate for $1.8 billion and Sears intellectu­al property, such as the brand name. Much of that plan would also be funded by forgiving some of the debt he holds.

 ?? ROY DOMINGO ?? HAPPY DAYS AT TOM’S WORLD A Tom’s World store at the Mall of Asia in Pasay City sells assorted stuffed toys for children.
ROY DOMINGO HAPPY DAYS AT TOM’S WORLD A Tom’s World store at the Mall of Asia in Pasay City sells assorted stuffed toys for children.

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