Thread regarding Sears layoffs

Sears Woes Hit Hometown Stores... Not Good

At a Sears Hometown store in Barre, Vt., shelves are bare of Craftsman tools, Whirlpool washing machines and Kenmore ovens. With little product to sell, owner Tom Coulter said he is turning customers away daily.

When the store has merchandise, the prices are often lower on the website of its sister chain, Sears. Mr. Coulter said his commission and bonus will be penalized if he matches sears.com’s prices, though he is able to match the prices of other chains without penalty.

Four years ago, the store was profitable. Today, it is barely breaking even. Mr. Coulter and his wife haven’t taken a salary since the spring, and they are struggling to pay their bills. If they walk away from their store, they could get sued. A similar story is playing out at Hometown stores across the country, the latest chapter in financier Edward Lampert’s dismantling of Sears.

A Sears Hometown spokesman said the company is committed to supporting its network of independent owners and is doing everything it can to help them succeed in the local communities where they operate.
Sears Hometown is a collection of smaller stores selling tools, appliances, and lawn and garden equipment. There are about 375 locations in mostly rural towns, and the majority of them are run by independent contractors such as Mr. Coulter. The Hometown stores had nearly $960 million in sales in its most recent fiscal year, which ended in February 2019. Both Sears Hometown and Sears are controlled by Mr. Lampert, although the smaller stores weren’t part of the Sears bankruptcy in 2018.

Originally part of Sears Holdings Corp., SHLDQ 15.06% the division was spun off into a separate publicly traded company in 2012 called Sears Hometown and Outlet Stores Inc. Mr. Lampert, the former Sears chairman, chief executive and largest shareholder, became a majority investor in the chain as a result of the spinoff.

The Hometown and Outlet chain continued to operate independently after Sears Holdings filed for bankruptcy protection in the fall of 2018. Mr. Lampert blocked an attempt by the spinoff’s board to liquidate the money-losing Hometown stores last spring, while he was in negotiations to buy full control of the chain.

In a letter to the Hometown and Outlet board, Mr. Lampert argued that liquidating the Hometown stores would hurt Hometown owners and their families, as well as their employees and the communities that they serve.

In October, Mr. Lampert paid $36 million for the 45% of Hometown that he didn’t already own. At the same time, Hometown agreed to sell assets including its Outlet business, which mostly sells used and discontinued goods, for about $133 million.

Sears Hometown and Outlet investors have filed a lawsuit in Delaware Chancery Court that accuses Mr. Lampert of buying the company for an unfairly low price. Mr. Lampert has denied the allegations.

Hometown store owners pay rent and the costs of keeping up their shops but don’t own the merchandise they stock. The goods are owned by the corporate parent, which pays them a commission on sales. Several owners said the flow of goods dried up once Mr. Lampert acquired full control of Hometown.

“We were able to work with vendors like Samsung and LG Electronics, 066570 2.89% ” said Stan Downey, who operates a Hometown store in Newton, Kan. After Mr. Lampert took over, “our shelves became empty.”

Through a spokesman, Mr. Lampert declined to comment.

Mr. Downey’s contract expires in 30 days. He doesn’t want to renew it but is afraid he will have trouble finding work given a two-year noncompete clause.

Another Hometown owner in Michigan said she is no longer able to honor Craftsman’s lifetime warranty. If customers come in looking for replacement parts, she sends them to a nearby Lowe’s. LOW 2.59%

Sears Hometown continues to have its own buying agreements with vendors and sources some merchandise through Sears, according to a person familiar with the situation.

Many vendors, including Whirlpool Corp., stopped or reduced their supply of goods to Sears Holdings as it teetered into bankruptcy protection. Roughly 270 vendors that continued supplying the retailer are getting paid about 33 cents on the dollar, complicating Sears’s efforts to keep its own shelves stocked, according to Sears employees.

Mr. Lampert bought 425 Sears department stores and Kmart locations out of bankruptcy this past February. They are owned by a company he controls called Transform Holdco LLC, also known as Transformco. He has continued to close stores, and now operates about 182 Sears and Kmart locations. Mr. Lampert also has continued to divest assets, including the DieHard battery brand, which Transformco agreed to sell in December for $200 million to Advance Auto Parts Inc. AAP -0.59%

Mr. Lampert last week reached an $18 million settlement with the estate of Sears Holdings, which remains in bankruptcy. He had accused the “old” Sears of intentionally delaying payments to vendors and shortchanging Transformco on promised inventory. The “old” Sears said it was owed $57.5 million by Transformco.

Hometown store owners said they are being kept in the dark about the company’s strategy and, in some cases, receiving misleading information.

“All communication has stopped,” said Ashley Enfinger, who owns two Hometown stores in Alabama and is a member of an owners council that is supposed to meet quarterly with management. Mr. Enfinger said about one-third of Hometown owners’ agreements expire in July. He said many, like him, don’t plan to renew.

Sears Hometown leadership has sent several business updates to owners since Mr. Lampert’s acquisition and holds frequent calls with the owners council, the person familiar with the situation said. The company is in discussions with a small number of owners who have asked to be let out of their contracts, which isn’t unusual following the holiday period, this person said.

One aspect puzzling to Hometown owners is why sears.com is undercutting them on prices.

In December, Tim England was selling a Kenmore side-by-side refrigerator for $1,799 at his Hometown store in Pocatello, Idaho. The same model was listed on Sears’s website for $1,299.

Sears Hometown and Sears operate separate websites and have different pricing structures, the person familiar with the situation said.

Mr. England said his store did less than $500,000 in sales last year, down from about $1.2 million three years ago. He said a big contributor to the sales decline was his inability to get products, a situation that Mr. England said worsened after Mr. Lampert acquired the Hometown stores. At the end of December, he tried to order a Maytag oven for a customer and was told it wouldn’t arrive until March.

Two days later, on Jan. 1, he closed his store, part of an agreement he worked out with the parent company. The deal required him to pay the freight to ship the inventory to other Hometown locations.

“Anyone could see that Sears wasn’t doing well,” Mr. England said. “But Hometown was a separate company. The way it was presented to me by management was that even if Sears went away, Hometown would still be around.”

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Post ID: @OP+136BkIMi

16 replies (most recent on top)

This was from the Wall Street Journal. Lives ruined all over middle America because Eddie won't pay vendors. In olden times they would have strung him up and cheered.

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Post ID: @3buag+136BkIMi

A handful of cranky "owners" upset because they're not working hard enough to make money. Jeez, fake news is alive and well on here.

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Post ID: @3kai+136BkIMi

The only reason Eddie is offering better pricing online is to starve the owners out and increase his .com business. Eddie is great at ruining people lives, owners lives who have worked hard to build a business in rural America.

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Post ID: @3cad+136BkIMi

Did Mr. Coulter know what he was getting into when he sold his soul in a deal with the devil?

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Post ID: @3ogx+136BkIMi

"Through a spokesman, Mr. Lampert declined to comment....."

Pretty much sums up his ethics and morality.

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Post ID: @2tsc+136BkIMi

https://www.wsj.com/articles/sears-woes-hit-hometown-stores-11579530928

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Post ID: @1acy+136BkIMi

Not allowing hometown franchisees to set prices to compete with sears.com sounds like the makings of a class action lawsuit to me.

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Post ID: @1evn+136BkIMi

@136BkIMi-1rvi He was saving jobs, remember??????

Yeah this guy is a joke.

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Post ID: @1une+136BkIMi

What then exactly was the point of blocking the board from liquidating hometown only to buy it, keep it semi operational and irritate the owners?

Real estate is understandable but what does Eddie even gain here? Does he think by stepping in and preventing the liquidation of hometown then buying it he did some good deed?

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Post ID: @1rvi+136BkIMi

They can’t get a stove to the hometown store until Thursday, but if you order it on the website you can have it delivered and installed on Wednesday. It’s cheaper too.

Take your pick? Delivered & installed Wednesday. Cheaper.

Pick up Thursday? More expensive.

Most people will take the cheaper route, it’s almost a no brainer.

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Post ID: @1ijp+136BkIMi

@136BkIMi-pmy,

That's a question that pops in my mind. I agree with other posters that federal authorities really need to open a probe on Eddie Lampert's business operations. Borrowing money to close stores. He refuses to respond to concerns of Hometown store owners. Something shady is going on with this man.

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Post ID: @1jqo+136BkIMi

"Several owners said the flow of goods dried up once Mr. Lampert acquired full control of Hometown."

Vendors don't want anything to do with Eddie Lampert, the cheapskate.

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Post ID: @1ser+136BkIMi

Wow!
How could they believe if Sears full line stores closed down, that the Hometown stores would still survive.
What line did they feed these business owners?
Sad and majority of the owners are mom and pop owners, this is their only source of income.

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Post ID: @1psv+136BkIMi

"One aspect puzzling to Hometown owners is why sears.com is undercutting them on prices.

In December, Tim England was selling a Kenmore side-by-side refrigerator for $1,799 at his Hometown store in Pocatello, Idaho. The same model was listed on Sears’s website for $1,299."

Isn't this along the lines of when he was having divisions within the company compete against one another? I can just envision his response to the store owners as something like "Stop whining–you're not trying hard enough!"

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Post ID: @zdw+136BkIMi

Why pay $36 million to just turn around and liquidate the business? The crazy world of Eddie Lampert.

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Post ID: @pmy+136BkIMi

Sears under Eddie Lampert pretty much destroys anything he touches.

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Post ID: @fgs+136BkIMi

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