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If you need any more proof that Sears Holdings (NASDAQ: SHLD) is headed straight for bankruptcy court, look no further than its first-quarter earnings report, released May 31, as it gives the clearest example of what happens to a company when you continuously strip it of anything valuable.
The troubled retailer said revenue nosedived 31% in the period as comparable-store sales tumbled 11.9%, the 26th straight quarter of a year-over-year comps decline and the sixth straight they were down by double digits. That's almost seven straight years of no growth in comps and it shows that customers find little of value at its stores, which include Sears and Kmart. It's a remarkable record of failure.
Data source: Sears Holdings quarterly SEC filings.
It also announced it had identified 100 unprofitable stores it would close, with 72 of them being shut down in the "near future." This is in addition to the 103 stores that have already closed this year.
The reason Sears remains in its current predicament -- and why it hasn't yet collapsed under the sheer weight of its decline -- is the same: Chairman and CEO Eddie Lampert, who is also Sears' largest shareholder.
Plucking yet another fruit from the tree
After years of neglect that relied more on the financial gymnastics of a hedge fund operator to maintain the appearance of profits than having any retail chops, the facade was finally ripped away as more valuable assets were spun off or sold off to raise cash to keep the lights on. In recent years, it has only been because of Lampert's deep pockets that Sears has not already sought bankruptcy protection. He has continuously extended short-term lines of credit after other lenders would not, just to make it through the next crisis point.
Now we're getting down to the end game. Sears has only a few assets left that hold residual value: Kenmore appliances, Diehard batteries, and its auto service centers. Lampert is apparenlty attempting to extract Kenmore for himself, and if all that Sears has left is to be the neighborhood garage, well, that's not much of a future at all.
In April, Lampert, through his ESL Investments hedge fund, offered to buy Kenmore, Sears' appliance parts business, its home-improvement business, and some real estate, which the board of directors said its was considering. It should be noted that the board consists of just six directors, one of whom is Lampert and another who is the president of ESL. The independent directors are reportedly the ones considering the proposal.