Sears' Bankruptcy: How It Got Here -- and What Happens Next

In This Article:

It was a long time coming for Sears Holdings Corp. (NASDAQ: SHLD). The venerable American retailer, founded back in 1893, filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy early Monday. The move would allow Sears to restructure in hopes of reemerging from bankruptcy with part of the business still standing.

The news came as a surprise to no one who's been following Sears' long demise because the company has been bleeding cash for years. Ten years of declining comparable sales, and annual losses since 2010, combined to fully erode what was the country's largest retailer just a generation ago.

While there are plenty of scapegoats, Eddie Lampert, who stepped down as CEO but remains chairman and the company's biggest shareholder, seems to deserve much of the blame. Lampert merged the company with Kmart in 2005, rescuing the discount retailer from bankruptcy, but the move turned out to be misguided. The hedge fund manager refused to make needed investments in the two brands, relying instead on financial engineering to extract value from the company through a series of asset sales and sale-leaseback arrangements including the creation of Seritage Growth Properties (NYSE: SRG), which became the landlord of 235 Sears locations in 2015.

Sears largely missed the boat on e-commerce, allowed Home Depot and Lowe's to take its appliance business, and lost ground in apparel to rival department-store chains. Over the last five years, the company's store count has fallen by more than 50% to less than 700 stores. But closing unprofitable stores and selling and spinning off assets, including the Craftsman tool brand and the Lands' End outdoor-apparel brand, have not saved or improved the underlying business.

The exterior of a Sears department store
The exterior of a Sears department store

Image source: Sears Holdings.

After several cash infusions and arrangements with Lampert's own hedge fund, ESL Investments, the company faced a $134 million debt payment on Oct. 15 that it couldn't meet while simultaneously trying to stock up on inventory for the upcoming holiday season. Sears is reportedly in talks with ESL Investments for a $300 million loan for cash that would help see the company through bankruptcy, according to the Wall Street Journal.

As part of the bankruptcy filing, the company announced it will close 142 stores by the end of the year, in addition to 46 locations that were already slated to close by next month. It's possible the company will also sell off real estate and other assets -- such as the Kenmore brand, which Lampert had offered to buy for $400 million, and other businesses such as Sears Home Services and Sears Auto Centers.