A bankruptcy judge is giving Sears Chairman Eddie Lampert another chance to buy the department store chain out of bankruptcy and save roughly 50,000 jobs.
Sears on Tuesday had planned to tell the bankruptcy court it had rejected Lampert's $4.4 billion offer to buy the retailer, after it fell short of covering its bankruptcy expenses. Lampert, though, protested the decision, highlighting the millions in fees that Sears' bankruptcy advisors have tallied, a person familiar with the situation told CNBC.
Ultimately, a bankruptcy judge is giving Lampert and a 126-year-old retail icon more time.
Lampert's hedge fund, ESL Investments, will now be required to pay a $120 million deposit by 4:00 p.m. Wednesday. Sears will allow Lampert to participate in a previously scheduled auction Monday, when it will compare ESL's offer to others by liquidators. But it's still unclear where Lampert will get all the funds to back his offer. A person familiar with the situation told CNBC the chairman has been working to get the financing.
Since Sears filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection on Oct. 15, Lampert has been fighting to keep a few hundred Sears and Kmart stores open. That's all that's left, as the company has been shrinking its asset base over the past few years, faced with slumping sales and a cloud of debt. Its stores haven't received the investments they needed to compete with the likes of Walmart, Target and now Amazon.
In bankruptcy proceedings, Sears' unsecured creditors have argued there may be claims against Sears for deals done under Lampert's tenure as CEO and its largest shareholder, which include Sears' spinoff of Lands' End in 2014 and transactions with Seritage Growth Properties, a real estate investment trust Lampert created through some Sears' properties a year later.
These creditors have been a thorn in Lampert's side, as he's tried to put up $1.8 billion in debt owed to him to help fund his proposed acquisition of Sears. Sears' unsecured creditors have opposed his attempt at a so-called credit bid.
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Still, ESL has stressed that all transactions it did with Sears during Lampert's tenure were approved by Sears' board.
Sears' bankruptcy lawyers, Weil, Gotshal & Manges, plan to charge Sears their customary hourly rates of $1,075 to $1,600 for work done by its partners and counsel, according to documents filed with the bankruptcy court.
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