| | | Business News | January 2009
Circuit City to Liquidate, Shutter Stores Karen Jacobs & Emily Chasan - Reuters go to original
Bankrupt electronics retailer Circuit City Stores said on Friday it will liquidate its assets and shutter hundreds of U.S. stores after failing to reach a deal to sell the company.
Circuit City is one of the largest retail bankruptcies seen in the current U.S. recession and its demise paves the way for larger rival Best Buy Inc to boost sales and gain clout with suppliers as the leading specialty electronics retailer.
Circuit City, the No. 2 retail player in U.S. electronics, sought approval from the U.S. Bankruptcy Court in Richmond, Virginia, on Friday to begin liquidation on Saturday.
"Regrettably for the more than 30,000 employees of Circuit City and our loyal customers, we were unable to reach an agreement with our creditors and lenders to structure a going-concern transaction ... and so this is the only possible path for our company," Vice Chairman James Marcum said.
Circuit City had indications of interest from private equity firm Golden Gate Capital and Mexican retail and media tycoon Ricardo Salinas Pliego, who owns more than 28 percent of the company, Gregg Galardi, a bankruptcy lawyer representing Circuit City said in court on Friday.
Shares of the chain fell 74 percent to 4 cents.
An evaluation of bids for the company's Canadian unit is still under way, and the company may seek to sell its website, Galardi said.
The company does not expect any value will remain from the bankruptcy estate for common shareholders. It has up to $1.3 billion in inventory to liquidate.
Circuit City filed for Chapter 11 protection in November, citing a deteriorating cash position and tighter terms from vendors. It recently closed 155 stores, and now has about 567 U.S. stores.
A group including Great American Group, Hudson Capital Partners, SB Capital Group and Tiger Capital Group won the auction to run Circuit City's liquidation.
A spokesman for Salinas was not immediately available for comment on the Circuit City announcement.
Throughout the auction this week, Circuit City had tried to arrange a deal with Salinas to operate a smaller group of 180 stores, but that attempt ultimately failed as the retailer lacked necessary support from trade vendors and financing to continue operating.
Circuit City's liquidators will continue to accept gift cards throughout the liquidations, Galardi told the court.
BEST BUY'S GAIN
Shares of Best Buy, which analysts have said stood to gain longer-term if Circuit City went out of business, were up 8 percent on Friday.
Anthony Chukumba, an analyst with FTN Midwest Securities, said although the demise of Circuit City could hurt Best Buy in the next few months, the Minneapolis retailer stands to gain a significant portion of sales in the long run.
He estimated that should Best Buy gain 30 percent of Circuit City store sales, that could add 50 cents in annual earnings per share over its next fiscal year.
"We think they'll get better pricing, more access to exclusive merchandise, better terms," Chukumba added.
But Best Buy spokeswoman Sue Busch Nehring said in an email that her company would not project how any Circuit City store closings might affect its business.
"It does mark a sad day. We're sorry to see the stores close and employees move on," Busch Nehring wrote.
Circuit City, founded in 1949 when Samuel Wurtzel opened Ward's, Richmond's first retail television store, stumbled as rising unemployment and tighter credit led consumers to cut back sharply on purchases beyond food and other staples.
Restructuring experts are expecting a wave of store closures and potential bankruptcies due to the recession.
Earlier this week, regional department store chain Gottschalks Inc filed for bankruptcy reorganization, and Goody's, a clothing retailer, said it plans to liquidate remaining stores in a return to Chapter 11.
The bankruptcy case is Circuit City Stores Inc, U.S. Bankruptcy Court, Eastern District of Virginia, No. 08-35653.
(Additional reporting by Cyntia Barrera Diaz in Mexico City, editing by Matthew Lewis, Dave Zimmerman) |
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