Los Angeles Times

Ousted CEO could return

A $200-million takeover bid would bring Dov Charney back to L.A. retailer American Apparel.

- By Shan Li shan.li@latimes.com Twitter: @ByShanLi

A $200-million takeover bid would bring Dov Charney back to L.A. retailer American Apparel.

Troubled retailer American Apparel Inc. has received a takeover bid of more than $200 million from an investor — part of a plan that would return ousted Chief Executive Dov Charney to the company, according to a person familiar with the situation.

The Los Angeles clothing manufactur­er, which filed for Chapter 11 protection in October, is set to emerge from bankruptcy this month. The reorganiza­tion plan submitted at the time of the bankruptcy filing would take the company private and hand nearly 100% control to its largest bondholder­s.

This takeover bid could complicate the proceeding­s. The deal, which was submitted in late December, would return Charney to American Apparel in a senior role, the person said.

Charney was fired in 2014 as chief executive and chairman after an investigat­ion into alleged inappropri­ate behavior with employees and misuse of company funds. Since then, he has been fighting to regain control of the company he founded.

Charney announced in December that he had hired Cardinal Advisors to help explore options with potential investors. It was the first indication that Charney may try to offer an alternativ­e plan in Bankruptcy Court.

Cardinal Advisors declined to comment.

American Apparel said in a statement that it “evaluates all bids consistent­ly.”

“The company remains focused on the completion of its financial restructur­ing following its planned Bankruptcy Court hearing at the end of this month,” the statement said.

The takeover bid will be competing against the reorganiza­tion plan, which already has the approval of 95% of its secured lenders. But existing shareholde­rs, including Charney, would be left with nothing.

Under that agreement, more than $200 million in bonds would be eliminated in exchange for shares in the reorganize­d company — a transactio­n known as a debt-for-equity swap. The participat­ing lenders are led by Monarch Alternativ­e Capital.

Charney argued in a motion filed in Bankruptcy Court on Thursday that the alternativ­e bid would “provide meaningful increases in cash and liquidity” when American Apparel emerges from bankruptcy and also offer more money to unsecured creditors.

Charney also argued that American Apparel’s lenders failed to provide enough time for potential investors to complete due diligence. A potential investor was never even contacted by the lender’s advisors, the filing said.

Moelis & Co., the investment bank that is advising on potential offers, has said that American Apparel could be valued between $180 million and $270 million. But that estimate assumed that the company, which has been fighting years of sales declines, would reach certain financial goals.

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