Sears files for Chapter 11 amid plunging sales, massive debt.

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Sears filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection Monday, buckling under its massive debt load and staggering losses.
The question now is whether a smaller version of the company that once dominated the American retail landscape can remain viable or whether the iconic brand will be forced out of business.
Sears, which started as a mail order catalog in the 1880s, has been on a slow march toward extinction as it lagged far behind its peers and incurred massive losses over the years.
"This is a company that in the 1950s stood like a colossus over the American retail landscape," said Craig Johnson, president of Customer Growth Partners, a retail consultancy. "Hopefully, a smaller new Sears will be healthier."
The company has struggled with outdated stores and complaints about customer service. That's in contrast with chains like Walmart, Target, Best Buy and Macy's, which have been enjoying stronger sales as they benefit from a robust economy and efforts to make the shopping experience more inviting by investing heavily in remodeling and de-cluttering their stores.
Sears Holdings, which operates both Sears and Kmart stores, will close 142 unprofitable stores near the end of the year, with liquidation sales expected to begin shortly. That's in addition to the closure of 46 unprofitable stores that had already been announced. Edward S. Lampert has stepped down as CEO but will remain chairman of the board. A new Office of the CEO will be responsible for managing day-to-day operations.
Sears joins a growing list of retailers that have filed for bankruptcy or liquidated in the last few years amid a fiercely competitive climate. Some, like Payless ShoeSource, successfully emerged from reorganization in bankruptcy court. But plenty of others like, Toys R Us and Bon-Ton Stores Inc., haven't. Both retailers were forced to shutter their operations this year soon after Chapter 11 filings.
Given its sheer size, Sears' bankruptcy filing will have wide ripple effects on everything from already ailing landlords to its tens of thousands of workers.
Lampert, the largest shareholder, has been loaning out his own money for years and has put together deals to prop up the company, which in turn has benefited his own ESL hedge fund.
Last year, Sears sold its famous Craftsman brand to Stanley Black & Decker Inc., following earlier moves to spin off pieces of its Sears Hometown and Outlet division and Lands' End.
In recent weeks, Lampert has been pushing for a debt restructuring and offering to buy some of Sears' key assets, like Kenmore, through his hedge fund as a $134 million debt repayment came due on Monday. Lampert personally owns 31 percent of the company's shares, while his hedge fund has an 18.5 percent stake, according to FactSet.
"It is all well and good to undertake financial engineering, but the company is in the business of retailing and without a clear retail plan, the firm simply has no reason to exist," said Neil Saunders, managing director of GlobalData Retail, in a recent analyst note.
Sears' stock has fallen from about $6 over the past year to below the minimum $1 level that Nasdaq stocks are required to trade in order to remain on the stock index. In April 2007, shares were trading at around $141. The company, which once had 350,000 workers, has seen its workforce shrink to fewer than 90,000 people as of earlier this year.
As of May, it had fewer than 900 stores, down from a 2012 peak of 4,000.
In a March 2017 government filing, Sears said there was "substantial doubt" it would be able to keep its doors open — but insisted its turnaround efforts would mitigate that risk.
Lampert pledged to return Sears to greatness by leveraging its best-known brands and its vast holdings of land, and more recently planned to entice customers with a loyalty program. But losses continued and the company struggled to get more people through the doors or to shop online.
Jennifer Roberts, 36, of Dayton, Ohio, was a long-time fan of Sears and has fond memories of shopping there for clothes as a child. But in recent years, she's been disappointed by the lack of customer service and outdated stores.
"My mom had always bought her appliances from Sears. That's where my dad got his tools," she said. "But they don't care about their customers anymore."
She said a refrigerator her mother bought at Sears broke after two years and still hasn't been fixed.
"If they don't value a customer, then they don't need my money," Roberts said.
Sales at the company's established locations tumbled nearly 4 percent during its fiscal second quarter. Still, that was an improvement from the same period a year ago. Total revenue dropped 30 percent in the most recent quarter, hurt by continued store closings.
"The problem in Sears' case is that it is a poor retailer," Saunders wrote in his analyst note. "Put bluntly, it has failed on every facet of retailing from assortment to service to merchandise to basic shop keeping standards. Under benign conditions, this would be problematic enough but in today's hyper-competitive retail environment it is a recipe for failure on a grand scale."
For decades, Sears was king of the American shopping landscape. Sears, Roebuck and Co.'s iconic catalog featured items from bicycles to sewing machines to houses, and could generate excitement throughout a household when it arrived. The company began opening retail locations in 1925 and expanded swiftly in suburban malls from the 1950s to 1970s. But the onset of discounters like Walmart created challenges for Sears that have only grown. Sears faced even more competition from online sellers and appliance retailers like Lowe's and Home Depot.
Store shelves have been left bare as many vendors have demanded more stringent payment terms, says Mark Cohen, a professor of retailing at Columbia University and a former Sears executive.
Meanwhile, Sears workers are nervous about what kind of severance they'll receive if their stores close.
John Germann, 46, works full-time and makes $14 per hour as the lead worker unloading merchandise from trucks at the Chicago Ridge, Illinois, store, which has been drastically reducing its staff since he started nine years ago. Germann now has only 11 people on his team, compared with about 30 a few years ago.
"We're doing the job of two to three people. It's not safe," he said. "We're lifting treadmills and refrigerators."
 

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DpkIz23XUAck7N7.jpg
 

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Sears[FONT=&quot] used the brand "JC Higgins" for their sporting goods, from bicycles to baseball bats to firearms.

[/FONT]
DpjnEM5UYAA1AXb.jpg
 

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Crazy but many probably don’t know you could buy a Sears home from the catalog
 

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Old time catalogs
 

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Sears-cover.jpg
 

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A1CDZ8LsgrL.jpg
 

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Sears-Catalog-Cover-Fall_Winter-1977.jpg
 

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I have 1 near my house that's still open.

Nanuet N.Y. store.

Always dead though
 

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At what point do you call it a day?
Why do companies like this get to reorganize over and over again ?
 

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and a reminder of the dangers of individual stock picking in long term investing;

SHLD

1 decade monthly

big.chart



it was a $40 stock approx 4 yrs ago


http://www.chicagotribune.com/business/ct-biz-sears-bankruptcy-pension-default-20181011-story.html

A Sears bankruptcy could cause one of the biggest pension defaults ever, but the government would protect 90,000 retirees


Sears, once the nation’s largest retailer, declares bankruptcy, it could cause one of the biggest pension defaults in U.S. history, but the government would step in to keep checks coming to more than 90,000 retirees.
The company’s long-term pension obligations, which have been underfunded by more than $1 billion for years, would be covered by the federal Pension Benefit Guaranty Corp., which has footed the bill for nearly 5,000 failed employer pension plans since its founding in 1974.
“PBGC is monitoring developments at Sears and will continue to protect its two pension plans, which cover over 90,000 people,” the agency said in a statement Thursday. “PBGC’s guarantee is critical to the retirement security of workers and retirees in pension plans.”
A spokesman for Sears Holdings Corp. did not respond Thursday to a request for comment
The struggling Hoffman Estates-based retailer is facing a $134 million debt repayment Monday, which reportedly could lead Sears to seek bankruptcy protection in the next few days. Under a Chapter 7 liquidation, the company’s pension obligations would shift to the government, while under a Chapter 11 reorganization, Sears could maintain one or both of its pension plans.
Drew Dawson, a law professor at the University of Miami, called the potential Sears pension default “pretty staggering” in its scope, based on historic comparisons.
“The human impact of this is really big on the individual retirees,” Dawson said. “But this would be a big impact on the PBGC itself, financially.”
In a blog post last month, CEO Edward Lampert wrote that Sears has contributed more than $4.5 billion to its pension plans since 2005, an obligation that “significantly impacted” the company, which hasn’t turned an annual profit since 2010.
<aside class="trb_ar_sponsoredmod" data-v-ntidm="1069604" data-withinviewport-options="bottomOffset=100&topOffset=1000000" data-load-method="trb.vendor.nativo.init" data-load-type="method" style="margin: 5px 0px 25px; clear: both; color: rgb(0, 0, 0); font-family: "Times New Roman"; font-size: 10px;"></aside>“Had the company been able to employ those billions of dollars in its operations, we would have been in a better position to compete with other large retail companies, many of which don’t have large pension plans,” Lampert wrote.


Sears entered into a five-year pension protection plan with the Pension Benefit Guaranty Corp. in 2016, agreeing to set aside certain assets for pension funding. In November, Sears amended the agreement to sell up to 138 properties to finance a $407 million contribution to its pension plans.
Last year, the agency paid $5.7 billion to nearly 840,000 retirees from 4,845 failed single-employer plans, according to its annual report. Taking over the Sears pension plans would be one of the largest defaults in its 44-year history.


Chicago-based United Airlines had the largest pension default when it terminated its four retirement plans while operating under bankruptcy protection in 2005. That shifted $7.3 billion in claims for more than 122,000 participants over to the agency.
For Sears retirees, a pension default by the company is not a major issue, as long as the checks keep coming.
“Pensions are not our concern because pensions will be secured for our retirees,” said Ron Olbrysh, 77, chairman of the Chicago-based National Association of Retired Sears Employees, which represents thousands of former employees across the country.
Olbrysh, the company’s former assistant general counsel who retired in 1996, said the Sears pensioners were primarily hourly employees who would be fully covered under the set limits of the agency. He, along with many higher-income salaried employees, took a lump sum pension payment when they retired.
A bigger concern for many Sears retirees is the potential loss of a life insurance plan that the company has continued to fund but which the agency would not cover.
“The retirees can still maintain that insurance if they want to pay for it themselves, but the average age of most our retirees is about 80 and the cost of that would be just ridiculous,” Olbrysh said
Olbrysh, who lives in suburban Lombard, started at Sears as a trademark attorney in 1972, and worked his way up the corporate ladder as the once powerful retailer began to lose its hold on consumers, failing to meet challenges from bricks-and-mortar competitors such as Walmart and, later, Amazon and other online giants.
He called its potential bankruptcy a shame, but perhaps a sign of the times.
In its heyday, Sears offered employees attractive benefits including a “phenomenal” profit-sharing plan, and of course, the pension plan, Olbrysh said.
“Sears was a good company for me,” he said. “I was lucky I got out when I did.”
 

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