364
Fashion Jobs
CLINIQUE
Brand General Manager, Clinique And Lab Series
Permanent · SEOUL
PARFUMS CHRISTIAN DIOR
Product Marketing Coordinator - Make up
Permanent · SEOUL
SSC PERFUMES & COSMETICS
E-Commerce Coordinator, Make up For Ever
Permanent ·
MOËT HENNESSY ASIA PACIFIC
Marketing Manager
Permanent · SEOUL
LORO PIANA
Vic & Client Engagement Manager
Permanent · SEOUL
LORO PIANA
Logistics Specialist
Permanent · SEOUL
LOUIS VUITTON MALLETIER
Event Manager
Permanent · SEOUL
LOUIS VUITTON MALLETIER
Store Projects Manager
Permanent · SEOUL
PARFUMS CHRISTIAN DIOR
Special Project & PR Manager
Permanent · SEOUL
HENKEL
Consumer Brands Ecommerce Key Account Manager
Permanent ·
HENKEL
Consumer Brands R&D Graduate 1year Program - Regulatory Affairs
Permanent ·
HENKEL
Regional Product Manager Apac in Korea
Permanent · INCHEON
AESOP
Duty Free Operations Coordinator
Permanent · SEOUL
AESOP
Retail Business Manager
Permanent · SEOUL
AESOP
Retail Business Manager
Permanent · SEOUL
L'OREAL GROUP
[l'Oreal Korea] E-Key Account Manager - Sales Online, Consumer Products Division
Permanent · SEOUL
L'OREAL GROUP
[l'Oreal Korea] (jr.) Finance Controller - Professional Products Division
Permanent · SEOUL
AESOP
The Hyundai Seoul - Retail Consultant
Permanent ·
AESOP
Aesop Busan - Retail Consultant
Permanent · BUSAN
ADIDAS
Manager, bu - Sportswear App & Kids, Brand Adidas
Permanent · SEOUL
ADIDAS
Manager, Digital Account Management, Wholesale
Permanent · SEOUL
CLINIQUE
Brand General Manager, Clinique And Lab Series
Permanent · SEOUL
By
Reuters API
Published
Jan 10, 2019
Reading time
3 minutes
Download
Download the article
Print
Text size

Sears chairman confirms new $5 billion bid to save bankrupt retailer

By
Reuters API
Published
Jan 10, 2019

Sears Holdings Corp Chairman Eddie Lampert confirmed on Thursday he has made a new takeover bid of more than $5 billion for the company, an offer that may significantly increase the likelihood the U.S. department store will be able to stay in business.


Reuters


Lampert’s revised offer, whose details were first reported by Reuters on Wednesday, will be assessed by Sears during a Jan. 14 bankruptcy auction. The company will consider whether the bid offers more value to creditors than a liquidation.

“We believe our proposal will provide substantially more value to stakeholders than any other option, in particular a liquidation,” a spokesperson for Lampert’s hedge fund, ESL Investments Inc, said in a prepared statement.

“(The proposal) is the best path forward for Sears, its associates and the many communities across the United States touched by Sears and Kmart stores,” the statement added. Sears also operates the Kmart discount chain.

Lampert’s previous bid, which fell short of Sears’ expectations, was valued at $4.4 billion. His new bid, made through an affiliate of ESL and disclosed in a regulatory filing on Thursday, assumes more than $600 million in additional liabilities, including taxes, vendor bills and other expenses Sears has incurred since filing for bankruptcy protection last October. That is on top of about $1.1 billion in liabilities Lampert, Sears’ biggest shareholder and creditor, previously agreed to assume.

“He has increased his bid substantially, but it’s hard to know how much more cash is in the mix,” said Todd Feinsmith, co-chairman of law firm Pepper Hamilton LLP’s bankruptcy practice. “I think it indicates he’s very serious.”

Determining if Lampert will prevail in buying the company without seeing any other bids that may come in for Sears, Feinsmith added, is hard to do. At the auction on Jan. 14, his offer will be compared with how much Sears would bring if sold off in pieces.

A group of Sears creditors, including some landlords and vendors, has been calling for the chain to shut its doors for good, saying they will recover more money in that scenario. They also say that suing Lampert over past deals he has done with the company will help boost how much they recoup.

Lampert has maintained that those previous transactions were proper. As part of his new bid, he has asked to be freed from having to face lawsuits over his past deals with Sears. For that right, a so-called “legal release,” Lampert is offering $35 million in cash, according to the regulatory filing.

Those creditors have also opposed Lampert’s proposal to forgive the $1.3 billion of Sears debt he holds and use it as currency for his offer, a bankruptcy move called a “credit bid.” Sears this week allowed his bid to move forward without U.S. bankruptcy judge in its case, Robert Drain, addressing whether the move is valid, but the judge will ultimately have to weigh in.

SAVING JOBS

Lampert’s bid would preserve up to 50,000 jobs. Sears employed about 68,000 people when it filed for bankruptcy in October. As part of his previous bid, Lampert planned to acquire 425 stores that are still open.

The new offer takes on roughly $166 million in payment obligations to vendors and $43 million in additional severance costs. The hedge fund will also assume $135 million in tax bills for properties that Lampert hopes to acquire as part of his bid.

To finance the new offer, ESL has received debt commitment letters from lenders for a new asset-backed loan.

ESL and hedge fund Cyrus Capital Partners LP, which was a creditor of Sears before its bankruptcy, will also provide debt financing, including a new real estate loan, according to the filing.

Sears had set a Jan. 9 deadline for Lampert to submit a new offer for the retailer and a $120 million deposit. The chain had decided to ask Drain to pursue liquidation on the morning of Jan. 8, before giving Lampert more time to improve his offer.

© Thomson Reuters 2024 All rights reserved.