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HBC in talks to go private

By Kristopher Fraser

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Business

After shuttering Lord & Taylor, selling off Gilt, and working to keep Saks competitive in an increasingly crowded retail field with more luxury e-commerce players popping up, Hudson's Bay Co. is now considering going private. Richard Baker, the executive chairman of Saks, is now leading a bid to take the retail company private. Baker, along with a group of shareholders who own 57 percent of the company, have submitted a proposal to take the company private at 9 dollars and 45 cents a share.

According to CNBC, the all-cash offer values the company at 48 percent premium from where the stock closed on Friday and is not contingent on financing. The purchase price is also equal to the price agreed to by Ontario Teachers’ Pension Plan Board for the sale of its entire block of approximately 10 percent of the outstanding common shares of HBC in January 2019, notwithstanding the meaningful decline in HBC’s share price since that time according to a statement from the company.

“While we continue to believe in HBC’s long-term potential, it has become clear that the significant challenges, risks and uncertainties facing HBC in the rapidly evolving retail environment are best addressed in a private market setting,” said Baker in a statement. “Our all-cash proposal would provide HBC’s public shareholders the ability to realize immediate and certain value for their shares at a substantial premium while transferring the risks and uncertainties facing HBC to the continuing shareholders. We believe that improving HBC’s performance will require significant time and patient long-term capital that is better suited in a private company context without the emphasis on short-term results and returns.”

The proposed take-private transaction would be conditioned on the receipt by the company of proceeds from the closing of the sale of the company’s 50 percent interest in the company’s European real estate joint venture and 49.99 percent interest in the company’s European retail joint venture to SIGNA, which was separately announced today by HBC, and would be funded from the net cash proceeds of the transaction, debt financing that the company would raise for this purpose and the continuing shareholders’ equity interest. In addition, the proposed transaction would be subject to customary closing conditions, including approval by the shareholders of the company by special resolution and a “majority of the minority” of shareholders.

The continuing shareholders and its advisors stand ready to work closely with the board of directors to make the proposal a reality for HBC shareholders and have advised the company that they are not interested in pursuing an alternative transaction. BofA Merrill Lynch and RBC Capital Markets are serving as financial advisors to the continuing shareholders in connection with the proposed transaction.

CNBC reported this morning that HBC had sold half of its interest in its European business for 1.5 billion dollars, and the funds will be used to pursue the company going private. HBC had agreed to sell half of its European business to Austrian rival, Karstadt Warenhaus, late last year.

Despite HBC being a publicly traded, Baker has been able to maintain tight control over it, as it was his equity firm, NRDC Equity Partners, that bought HBC and took it public.

photo: via hbc.com
HBC
Hudson's Bay
Hudson's Bay Co.
Richard Baker
Saks Fifth Avenue