The Columbus Dispatch

Sears CEO offers plan to avert bankruptcy

- By Abha Bhattarai

Sears could face bankruptcy if it doesn’t meet its next debt payment, due in the coming weeks. Now, the retailer’s chief executive has come up with a last-minute plan to save it, after already shuttering thousands of stores and selling off some of its key brands.

Eddie Lampert, who owns the hedge-fund ESL Investment­s and is also the retailer’s largest shareholde­r and creditor, has asked creditors to refinance $1.1 billion in debt before a $134 million debt payment due Oct. 15, according to a Sunday filing with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission. He also called for the company to sell off $3.25 billion worth of real estate and assets, including Sears Home Services and the company’s flagship Kenmore brand, which Lampert offered to buy last month for $400 million.

In the filing, Lampert’s hedge fund said it “must act immediatel­y to have sufficient runway to continue its transforma­tion” if Sears is to become profitable The last Sears store in Chicago closed this summer. A new plan to save the retailer from bankruptcy calls on creditors to refinance $1.1 billion in debt by Oct. 15. again. The company, which includes 820 Sears and Kmart stores, has about $5.6 billion in outstandin­g debt.

“Eddie Lampert is seeking permission from himself to keep Sears on life-support while he continues to drain every last remaining drop of blood from its corpse,” said Mark Cohen, director of retail studies at Columbia Business School and the former chief executive of Sears Canada. “The operation is a failure and there is no plan to turn that around.”

Sears said its board, which is chaired by Lampert, had received the proposal and had directed its advisers “to work closely with ESL.” Analysts said the plan is likely to pass since Lampert is Sears’ largest shareholde­r.

Lampert’s latest attempts may provide a short-term life line, but analysts said that it is not a sustainabl­e plan for a company that has failed to reinvent itself for an era of online shopping. Sears, which hasn’t turned a profit since 2010, last year posted a loss of $383 million. Sales dropped 25 percent to $16.7 billion.

Sears, founded 125 years ago as a mailorder business, was for decades one of the nation’s premier retailers. But in recent years, it has slumped, even as its competitor­s report quarter after quarter of growth.

“Without revenue growth, Sears will remain a company at risk,” Neil Saunders, managing director of GlobalData Retail, wrote in a note to clients. “As usual, Sears is focusing on financial maneuvers and missing the wider point that sales remain on a downward trajectory.”

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