Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Sears, Whirlpool to end partnershi­p

- LISA WOLFSON AND JONATHAN ROEDER

After a century-long history together, Sears Holdings Corp. will stop sales of most Whirlpool Corp. products after the companies couldn’t agree on pricing terms.

The retailer will no longer carry Whirlpool brands such as Maytag, KitchenAid and Jenn-Air, effective immediatel­y, Sears said last week in an employee memo that was provided to Bloomberg on Tuesday.

“Whirlpool has sought to use its dominant position in the marketplac­e to make demands that would have prohibited us from offering Whirlpool products to our members at a reasonable price,” Sears said in the memo. The department store chain will continue to sell Whirlpool products only until its current inventory

is depleted.

Whirlpool informed Sears in May of its decision to stop providing products, Chief Executive Officer Marc Bitzer said Tuesday on an earnings conference call. Sears represents about 3 percent of global revenue for Whirlpool, which is in the process of shipping its inventory to other vendors.

“In terms of the impact of shifting that, to be honest it’s not a whole lot,” Bitzer said. He declined to give details on why the companies couldn’t come to terms.

Whirlpool is raising its prices to cover higher costs for raw materials. The company’s shares fell $19.24, or 10.5 percent, to close Tuesday

at $163.26, a day after cutting its earnings forecast and posting quarterly results that missed the projection­s of analysts and Wall Street.

Sears shares fell 57 cents, or 8.7 percent, to close at $5.99.

Whirlpool will continue to supply about 10 branded products to the retailer, Bitzer said.

The manufactur­er expects earnings of $13.60 to $13.90 a share this year, down from a previous forecast of as much as $15.

The outlook renews concerns that Whirlpool can’t keep its costs in check, especially as the company struggles to integrate Italy’s Indesit SpA business. Appliance shoppers also have been gravitatin­g toward lower-end machines, hurting Whirlpool’s price mix. In a bid to

get back on track, Whirlpool is reducing expenses by $150 million — on top of existing cost-cutting efforts.

Whirlpool, then operating as Upton Machine Company, sold its first washers to Sears in 1916, according to the manufactur­er’s website. Five years later, Sears lent Upton $87,500 to expand its washer factory, eventually converting that to a stake in Upton. To feed growing demand at the retailer, Upton merged with another washer-maker in 1929.

For years, Whirlpool manufactur­ed appliances under the Kenmore name, sold exclusivel­y at Sears. The retailer announced earlier this year that it would begin selling its Kenmore appliances through Amazon.com Inc.

 ??  ?? A repairman installs a Whirlpool water heater at a home in Los Angeles in this file photo. Sears will no longer sell Whirlpool appliances, ending a business partnershi­p that dates back more than 100 years.
A repairman installs a Whirlpool water heater at a home in Los Angeles in this file photo. Sears will no longer sell Whirlpool appliances, ending a business partnershi­p that dates back more than 100 years.

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