The Tragedy of Sear: How Hedge Funds Profit from Bankruptcy
“Attention is directed to enriching the management, buyout partners and their institutional backers. That is the nature of the game. To argue otherwise is bogus.” -Luke Johnson, of private equity firm Risk Capital Partners
Their playbook is a tale of plunder and pillage.
As we examine how a hedge fund took over Sears, we will see a brazen example of how hedge funds profit when their target corporations go bankrupt.
Eddie Lampert, once described by TIME as a wunderkind of Wall Street, reasoned that because of his success at passive investing — and although he had not one hour of retail experience — his hedge fund ESL Investments could take on America’s 128-year-old iconic retailer, Sears, and make it “great again “ — yes, his actual words..
Lampert planned to move Sears to more of an online shopping model through “Shop Your Way”, a program designed to incentivize customers to move to internet shopping. Sears customers, however, were older and not interested. At the same time, because he thought the brick-and-mortar stores were not so important, he stopped funding store maintenance. Soon the stores were in shambles. Business Insider reported leaking ceilings, cracked floors, rat infestations, stores operating with about half of the needed staff so customers could not even check out and were leaving empty-handed. Sears denied all allegations.
By 2013, sales continued to decline so Lampert had himself appointed CEO. By 2016 media reported sales had halved. Sears lost $8.2 billion in 2016 alone.
Back in 2015, when it had become clear that Sears’ days were numbered, Lampert’s hedge fund created a real estate investment trust called Seritage Growth Properties. Lampert owned 43% of Seritage and was Chairman of its Board of Trustees. At this time, he also controlled 54% of Sears’s shares.
All these positions made Lambert: Sears CEO, as well as lender, vendor, controlling shareholder and now, landlord.
Stripping Out the Plum Assets
In a classic move out of the corporate raiders’ playbook, Lampert caused Sears to sell 253 of its prime location stores to Seritage. Sears got the cash, but from then on had to pay rent.
Next, according to the PE playbook, Sears started closing Seritage owned stores. Seritage could then redevelop these prime sites for more profitable ventures. For example, The New York Times reported that
• in Santa Monica, CA, Seritage converted the closed Sears stores into office spaces suitable for the area’s burgeoning high tech sector.
• On Long Island, NY, it is redeveloping the Sears site into a 600-unit apartment complex.
• In Aventura, FL, it has begun construction of a luxury shopping center on a former Sears location.
Wiping Out Worker Pensions
In a stock move, Lambert put Sears into Chapter 11 bankruptcy, then made a bid to buy it free of debts, especially the pension obligations to workers of $1.4 billion for the 90,000 Sears retirees. His bid was approved by the court. The government pension plan (Pension Benefit Guarantee Corporation) took over that pension obligation. The workers did get their pensions; but it meant that other businesses, who pay the premiums for this insurance, subsidized Lambert (Chicago Tribune, undated).
A Modern American Tragedy
How has Lampert fared? Retail tech analyst Pula Rosenblum writing in Forbes believes, “This exercise in job destruction has made Lampert even richer.” The New York Times reported in 2018 more sources of profit, “Mr. Lampert’s stake in this business [Seritage] is now worth approximately $1.1 billion.” He has pocketed another $1.4 billion from his investment in the retailer, Institutional Investor recently calculated. Most of those profits came from performance fees ESL investors paid to Lampert for his ability to extract wealth from Sears and Kmart despite those companies losing money.
Three thousand Sears employees lost their jobs, but the CEO kept his yacht
Business Insider adds: “Lampert’s home, located in the wealthy Indian Creek community off Miami’s coast, is a sprawling estate worth $38 million. Lampert also owns a $26 million property in Connecticut, a $14.5 million home in Colorado, and a 288-foot yacht called Fountainhead.”
Is this how capitalism is supposed to work?
Lampert failed to improve the company’s performance, failed to meet its obligations to creditors, screwed its workers, and still made a huge profit for his hedge fund members and himself.
See the previous posts on hedge funds and private equity:
