Sears, once the world's biggest retailer, now faces bankruptcy

Unable to keep up with e-commerce, the 125-year-old company hasn’t turned a profit since 2010.
by Lucy Bayly / Oct.10.2018 / 4:41 AM PDT / Updated 4:50 AM PDT

The outdoor sign stands in the parking lot of a Sears department store in Saint Paul, Minn.David Zalubowski / AP file



Sears, once the largest retailer in the world, is now reportedly facing bankruptcy.

The company, which hasn’t turned a profit since 2010 and is $134 million in debt, recently approached several banks to prepare for bankruptcy filing, CNBC reported Wednesday.


Shares plunged almost 20 percent on the news, and are set to open at a record low.






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Sears CEO Eddie Lampert has been pumping funds from his own hedge fund, ESL Investments, into the company for years in an attempt to keep it afloat. Lampert owns a controlling share in Sears, with 31 percent of its stock; his hedge fund owns another 19 percent.

In August, ESL made an offer to buy out Sears' well-known appliance brand Kenmore and the company's home improvement business. Cash from those sales would infuse the company with around half a billion dollars, which could stave off bankruptcy for a few more months. Sears sold off another legacy brand, Craftsman, in 2017.


Once a staple of Main Street and malls nationwide, the 125-year-old company has shut down over 100 stores in the last year, with 46 stores set to shutter next month alone. Sears and Kmart, part of Sears Holdings, operated around 1,000 stores in 2017.

Shares have fallen by more than 85 percent in the last year as e-commerce has taken over the brick-and-mortar retail space. Despite pairing up with Amazon in 2017 to sell appliances online, analysts say Sears has not kept pace with change nor made investments in the digital space to the extent that Walmart and Target have done.

https://www.nbcnews.com/business/bus...report-n918446