RADIOSHACK IS NO MORE

At least you get 1,500 more Sprint stores in the deal.

The fact of the matter is there will be 2,500 more SPACE AVAILABLE signs in dying malls across America.

The fact is that at least 20,000 more Americans will be losing their jobs.

And this isn’t the end. Guitar Center is about to go bankrupt.

JC Penney and Sears are on a Bataan Death March towards bankruptcy. The entire debt financed, consumption based, mallcentric delusion is being shattered. Get used to it. It has only just begun.

Make sure you pick up a remote control car during their liquidation sale.

RadioShack files for bankruptcy

RadioShack Corp. filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection Thursday after reaching a deal to sell as many as 2,400 of its stores to hedge fund Standard General.

Under the deal, Standard General, which led a rescue loan for RadioShack RSHC, -12.22%   last year, would acquire between 1,500 and 2,400 RadioShack stores and partner with wireless operator Sprint Corp. to operate as many as 1,750 of them, RadioShack said Thursday.

RadioShack, which filed for Chapter 11 protection with the U.S. Bankruptcy Court in Wilmington, Del., said it was seeking court approval to tap liquidation firm Hilco Merchant Resources to close the remaining stores. RadioShack operates about 4,000 stores in the U.S.

Patrick Fitzgerald contributed to this article.

An expanded version of this report appears at WSJ.com.

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28 Comments
BUCKHED
BUCKHED
February 6, 2015 6:15 am

Although a store/company going out of business is part of the cycle,celebration isn’t something I’d do .

When 20k people will be out of a job and others will feel the pinch further down the trail, it’s not gonna’ be a fun day for many .

hardscrabble farmer
hardscrabble farmer
February 6, 2015 7:10 am

Nailed it!

Am I on a different time line? I feel like this place has gone bankrupt before.

I wonder how the new investors from the December bailout must feel this morning.

SKINBAG
SKINBAG
February 6, 2015 7:28 am

ADMIN spoke of this outcome (predicted it) many months ago !

Try as you may, a person, a corporation, a government can only finesse / ignore the numbers (cold hard facts) for so long. Eventually the math (facts) overtake the bullshit and the piper must be paid.

flash
flash
February 6, 2015 7:48 am

Good bye old friend , proud to have known ye!

First it was Otasco, then Western Auto , then Woolworths cashed it in , later went Circuit City , then Zayre bit the bullet, and alas our beloved Radio Shack is no more.We weep as nation.

I shall crank my old Realistic c STA-95 to ten and lament..

Chicago999444
Chicago999444
February 6, 2015 7:58 am

I’ll miss the neighborhood Shack, which has been a handy place to pick up small, simple electric things like alarm clocks and nickel metal hydride batteries.

Another small retail space will go dark. I’m seeing many more small-space vacancies in retail districts around the city, while more suburban malls are failing and shuttering.

The question is how the people who built all this out to begin with ever thought the consumer market could support so much retail within its means, anyway. When this country had a healthy manufacturing economy, between 1940 and 1970, we had only 4 sq ft of retail space per consumer. It was just when our economy began to sicken and lose its markets and manufacturing to the Pacific Rim countries, and we began to try to “financialize” our way back to a nervous fake “prosperity” based on debt and inflation, that retail proliferated and we began to become totally dependent upon spending money we never even had on junk that does more to degrade our lives than enhance them, that retail swelled to over 40 sq ft per consumer.

TC
TC
February 6, 2015 8:05 am

Feeling a little nostalgia this AM… grew up with Radio Shack as the go-to place for tech gadgetry, oddball batteries and especially circuit board components. As the market evolved, Radio Shack offered nothing – no selection of appliances like the bigger box stores and what little selection of computers, phones, etc were always overpriced relative to other stores. They even failed at their special niche of providing circuit board components… the last few times I went looking for a capacitor or resistor, their selection sucked and the guys working there had no clue. I went in there to see if they had a multimeter which could check capacitance so I could verify a suspect capacitor out of a dehumidifier on the fritz, and not one of the guys working there even knew what capacitance was. I’m no EE, but for fuck’s sake. Happy trails old friend.

Stucky
Stucky
February 6, 2015 8:12 am

I THINK that I MIGHT have spent $50 in my entire life at RS. Good bye, old friend … I’ll miss ya. heh heh

On Rockwell this morning ….

=======================================================

Stock Buybacks and Sears’ Death Spiral

By Eric Englund

February 6, 2015

On November 17, 2004, big news hit the retail world. Attention Kmart shareholders, your company announced that it was going to purchase Sears, Roebuck for $11 billion. In a November 18, 2004 New York Times article, it was stated: “The takeover is a triumph for Kmart’s largest shareholder, Edward S. Lampert, a billionaire investor who pushed the company to emerge from bankruptcy barely 18 months ago, shut many stores and sold dozens of others to Sears as he presided over a run-up in Kmart’s value on Wall Street.” It was further reported, in this article, that: “’This is going to be an enormous undertaking,’ said Mr. Lampert, who is Kmart’s chairman and will become chairman of the new company, to be called Sears Holdings. ‘We’re really not looking to have two separate cultures. We’re hoping to blend these into one great culture.’” To be sure, it is wonderful to have a great corporate culture; however, culture doesn’t matter if a company is broke. Under the chairmanship of Eddie Lampert, Sears has been driven to financial insolvency. I firmly believe Sears will declare bankruptcy and Eddie Lampert’s penchant for stock buybacks will have played a key role in breaking this company.

Euphoria reigned when Kmart announced the takeover of Sears. Per the above-mentioned New York Times article: “Expressing faith in Mr. Lampert’s track record of squeezing profit from poorly managed companies, Wall Street cheered the news yesterday. The share price of Kmart rose nearly $8, to close at $109. Sears, Roebuck jumped $7.79, or more than 17 percent, to $52.99.” Oh, and the first year of operations, for this newly combined company, was a promising one. For fiscal-year 2005, Sears’ revenues were $48.9 billion with a net profit of $858 million. At fiscal year-end 2005, the balance sheet looked healthy too; with nearly $4.9 billion of working capital, $11.6 billion of equity, over $4.4 billion of cash, and a total-liabilities-to-equity ratio of 1.6 to 1. By the close of fiscal-year 2005, Sears Holdings Corporation’s share price was $114.74. Having faith, in Eddie Lampert, seemed to be well placed.

2005 did not turn out to be a fluke. Sears turned profits in 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009, and 2010. Over the six-year period, of 2005 to 2010, Sears’ cumulative net profit was $3.8 billion. Sears’ and Kmart’s employees were working hard and making Eddie Lampert look good. A feel-good story, correct?

Unfortunately, the answer is “no”. While front-line and backroom employees were doing their part, Eddie Lampert and Sears’ top executives were busy strip mining Sears’ balance sheet. Sears undertook stock buybacks, from 2005 to 2010, that totaled nearly $5.83 billion; meaning share repurchases exceeded profits, over this six-year period, by a little over $2 billion. Considering Kmart emerged from bankruptcy just 18 months before the acquisition of Sears, it seems counterintuitive for an executive team to willfully weaken Sears’ balance sheet instead of building as much financial strength as possible. Did Eddie Lampert, a Yale educated businessman, not learn any lessons from Kmart’s bankruptcy?

Well, the tough times came for Sears. This retailer lost $3.12 billion in 2011, $1.054 billion in 2012, and $1.116 billion in 2013. With big-box retailing being an ultra-competitive business, sound balance sheet management is critical. So why would a retailer’s management team knowingly weaken the company’s cash, working capital and equity positions; which is exactly what stock buybacks do. To me the answer is that short-term personal financial gain, for executives, trumped long-term strategic planning.

The following table should be embarrassing for Eddie Lampert, Sears’ board members, and its executives—dollar figures are in millions:

The Sears Death Spiral

For the seven years Sears Holdings undertook share repurchases, the buybacks exceeded net profits in five of those years. This is what I mean by strip mining Sears’ balance sheet. Once management grasped the magnitude of the losses Sears was facing, the buybacks ceased; and should have never happened in the first place.

Through the third quarter of fiscal-year 2014, Sears Holdings’ net loss was $1.523 billion. And now, nearly ten years after Eddie Lampert’s triumphant acquisition of Sears, this retailer’s balance sheet is in tatters. As of the third-quarter ending November 1, 2014, cash stands at a paltry $326 million; working capital is negative $823 million while equity has nearly vanished and is merely $126 million. On top of this miniscule equity position stands a mountain of liabilities totaling $15.043 billion; leaving a mind-numbing total-liabilities-to-equity ratio of 119.4 to 1 (a ratio of 3 to 1 is considered to be a bit high and worrisome; so higher is not better).

When Sears’ ugly third-quarter results were announced on December 4, 2014, investors who visited Sears Holdings Corporation’s website were provided with some positive spin and perhaps a vision for soldiering forward:

“We remain intently focused on delivering an unparalleled integrated retail experience for our customers through Shop Your Way and above all, returning Sears Holdings to profitability,” said Edward S. Lampert, Sears Holdings’ Chairman and Chief Executive Officer. “During the quarter, we unveiled or expanded several Integrated Retail customer initiatives, which helped drive online and multi-channel sales. Our members are responding to our transformation, and we are encouraged by the year-over-year domestic Adjusted EBITDA trends, which mark a positive departure from the prior six quarters. At the same time, we continue to enhance the Company’s capital structure and liquidity to support our transformation into an integrated membership-focused company.”

I find the last sentence, of this paragraph, to be stunningly disingenuous. After all, now that Sears is broke, executive management is looking for ways to enhance Sears’ capital structure and liquidity. You’ll never hear a board member, or a high-level executive, admit that their company’s stock buybacks were a mistake. But if you do the simple math, and add back the $6.011 billion Sears Holdings threw away via share repurchases, you’d have a company that remains soundly capitalized and liquid enough to support a corporate transformation.

Of course, let’s not forget a premise behind stock buybacks is to enhance shareholder value. At fiscal year-end 2005, Sears’ stock was trading at $114.74. Sears’ stock, presently, is trading at $33.30; a decline of over 70%. Sears’ share repurchase program, accordingly, has resulted in the exact opposite of its intended outcome of enhancing shareholder value. Had the stock buybacks not occurred, Sears’ balance sheet would be markedly stronger and, hence, deserving of a much higher share price than it currently enjoys.

Considering 2014’s anemic Christmas season, I predict Sears Holdings’ net worth will fall into negative territory when it reports fiscal-year 2014’s results. When a company has little cash, negative working capital, and a negative net worth, it is painfully insolvent. I also predict that when Sears declares bankruptcy, the talking heads on CNBC and Bloomberg TV will not call Eddie Lampert onto the carpet and question Sears’ reckless stock buyback program running from 2005 to 2011. How did flushing away over $6 billion, for share repurchases, enhance shareholder value for Sears’ stockholders? This is not a question that will be posed by our lapdog media; yet the answer will be obvious when Sears’ shares hit $0

Stucky
Stucky
February 6, 2015 8:16 am

The following pic is one of the funniest I’ve ever posted. Don’t you agree?

[imgcomment image[/img]

overthecliff
overthecliff
February 6, 2015 8:35 am

Stuck, Jim Cramer was Lamperts cheerleader. You have to admit he did a great job of raping the company and employees and made a lot of money doing it.

Mark
Mark
February 6, 2015 9:05 am

Yes, but jobs are surging according to the BLS today.

Dutchman
Dutchman
February 6, 2015 9:51 am

All that Radio Trash is here in Minnesota is a phone store for illegals. Staffed by illegals.

Last December I walked through Sears, at Ridgedale Mall (a local high end mall) – yeah Sears was an anchor store back in 1975 – at a high end mall – now it is a tomb.

During a December, week day evening, Sears was like a mausoleum, I didn’t see anyone, not even a clerk. When entering the store, Professor Peabody and the Way Back Machine come to mind.

Dutchman
Dutchman
February 6, 2015 9:56 am

Forgot to say that losing 20,000 jobs, will cause the unemployment rate to go down – cause that’s how the gubmints maff works. Once everyone is unemployed, and has given up looking, they aren’t counted as unemployed. Thus we will have 0% unemployment, while nobody is working!

Anonymous
Anonymous
February 6, 2015 10:47 am

Not so fast .I was in a Charlotte NC radio shack yesterday and business was booming. Had two cash registers going. Store was full of young people buying all kinds of electronic devices. I ask the store manager about the chapter 11 bankruptcy. He said they are closing many stores but keeping the ones like histhat are doing well. He said his store will remain open .

bb
bb
February 6, 2015 10:48 am

Anonymous was bb.

Dan
Dan
February 6, 2015 11:07 am

I agree with what TC said previously. End of an era, Well, really the era ended many years ago for Radio Shack, but when I was a kid Radio Shack was the shit. I had more fun with a 200&1 project kit then most any other toy I owned. Hell, if I still had it, I would play with it now.

[imgcomment image[/img]

Montefrio
Montefrio
February 6, 2015 11:23 am

Ï was in a Radio Shack in November, but it was in Lima, Perú. Bought myself an HP 32gb pen drive at a better price than in a nearby computer store. Girl friend bought me one of those cute little mini-massager gadgets that stimulate my aging feet nicely. People in Perú still like the Shack, and I too have fond memories of it, remote control cars included.

Much of what is fast becoming obsolete in the USA and EU still flies down here, but I wouldn’t place any bets on outdated retail models staying aloft here either.

dilligaf
dilligaf
February 6, 2015 11:54 am

Dan says – “Hell, if I still had it, I would play with it now”

Soon to be said by Bruce Jenner as well….

Rise Up
Rise Up
February 6, 2015 12:14 pm

I’ve bought a number of useful electronic things from RS like connectors, cables, and capacitors that I used for auto electronics and computer stuff. I guess those items will only be available online now.

As an aside, I worked for Sprint for 20 years (1984-2004) and it was a great gig. Worked my way up from computer operator in the “computer room” (now called data centers) to middle management. Got my Bachelor of Science CIS degree about half-way through my tenure there with employer education assistance money. Plus they had a pension plan that was fully employer paid (like most companies, they ended the pension program in 2004). I used to get a “retention bonus” every quarter for a few years during the heyday of telecommunications just to not leave. That was when hi-tech employees were at a premium and in demand. “Those Were The Days”, indeed! Last year they offered an early lump-sum payout to former employees in the plan, right after merging with Japan’s SoftBank company. I got about 175% of the lump sum I would have received come 2018. Anybody that didn’t take that deal is an idiot, because if Sprint ever files for bankruptcy, the PBGC most likely won’t pay any lump sum to pending pensioners and could even reduce any monthly annuity they would be entitled to (my pension had options for either a lump sum plus monthly or a larger monthly).

Sprint used to be a very innovative company in the 80’s-90’s. In 1984 when I started it was actually GTE Telenet, which was the first public data network. In 1986 it became US Sprint with the merger of United Telecommunications and GTE Telenet. They made some bad business decisions after that, especially the merger with NexTel. The name “Sprint” came from Southern Pacific Railroad Internal Networking Telephony, which was one of the early microwave and then fiber optic routes along the Southern Pacific railways.

R.I.P., Radio Shack. Sprint, you’re next.

the tumbleweed
the tumbleweed
February 6, 2015 12:24 pm

I went into a radio shack last summer. I was the only one in the store and the clerk looked like he had a cush job, since there were no customers he got to play on his phone all day. He should have been reading a book on how to code or really any other skill, knowing unemployment was quickly approaching on the horizon. What do retail employees fall back on? I guess Walmart always needs a few more.

The writing has been on the wall for several years now. Admin has been saying the same, like a tinfoil hat guy repeating himself on the street corner. The correct course of action was to end the business and liquidate years ago, before circumstances force your hand. But we know that business common sense for the peasants does not apply to the big boys. Their goal was to extend, pretend, and suck as much wealth from the shareholders as possible. The banks offered futile financing so they could end up owning the company’s real assets for a mere pittance of their conjured fiat. The CEO gave lip service to revamping the business so that he could squeeze out another year’s salary as he clutched the ripcord to the golden parachute the whole time. It’s all a game, the rules of which are not taught to the masses but are easy enough to figure out if you have the desire to think for yourself. Now the parasitical banks and white collar workers will move on to the next host, ravage it and the good times will roll. Only losers here are the shareholders, probably dupes who owned it through 401ks and retirement plans, and the workers who thought they had a steady paycheck.

bb
bb
February 6, 2015 1:27 pm

Admin , the store manager knew about radio shack being in bankruptcy but I guess he thought his store would be saved.He had a lot of customers and said store was doing well.

starfcker
starfcker
February 6, 2015 2:11 pm

Surprise, surprise. And the winner (again)…. is walmart. Crushing competition in a town near you………. (again) nice work, fellas. Onward monopolistic soldiers, to JCP and sears. Let the american worker blood flow….

dilligaf
dilligaf
February 6, 2015 3:01 pm

I knew radio shack was done when they started asking me for my zip code and phone number with every purchase. Not to mention the employees that thought transformers were a toy from the 80’s.

Westcoaster
Westcoaster
February 6, 2015 3:03 pm

Radio Shack lost their way many years ago when the decided to ditch their core customer (electronic hobbyist) in favor of more trendy smartphone gear. In their prime, they were the “go-to” place for electronic components, connectors, batteries, etc. And many people began their computer experience with a “Trash-80”. More so than the Kmarts, Zayres or Woolcos of the world, the Shack will be missed.

Didius Julianus
Didius Julianus
February 6, 2015 4:20 pm

Yes, a sad day for us who remember. Remember Lafayette electronics? They were even better than the shack was in the good old days! Here in New Zealand there is “Jaycar Electronics” which still has all the stuff you could get in the Shack back in the 1970s (plus more up to date stuff, of course). They seem to be doing well. If you want some nostalgia for electronic parts, check this out:

http://www.jaycar.co.nz/

Bullock
Bullock
February 6, 2015 7:44 pm

All a person really needs to do is be observant when driving around and notice the parking lots of retailers. Take a walk inside, look at the merchandise and customers. Go home and research all you can about the company, and use a little common sense. You can even contact Jim Cramer, I am sure he can steer you in the right direction, then do a 180 on his advise and short it and wait.

I am going to look at Eye Glass World and see what I can find.

HopeZeroKelvin
HopeZeroKelvin
February 6, 2015 8:12 pm

On NOES!!!!

I LOVE RadioShack. The stores I have wandered into have always had staff that was helpful and knowledgeable. Okay, I have the electronic savvy of a microbe that lives at deep undersea volcanic vents, but still.

Oh wither will I go know when I need some Enlightenment of my Electronic Darkness?

TE
TE
February 6, 2015 8:49 pm

Wow, it only took a few years, but this is vindicating for Admin, he knew it all along. (so did anyone that could read profit/loss and understand how they hide shit from “investors”).

@strfcker, Radio Shack should have NEVER tried to compete with Wally. Wally doesn’t offer the geeky, specifically geeky, stuff that RS did. There should have been little overlap. BUT, RS decided to try and be “little” Wally’s/Best Buys, and they failed spectacularly. They should have gone ‘net hard and doubled down on the specialty parts, not gone after soccer moms.

As for unemployment, oops. Did you all know that in order to qualify for unemployment you have to work at least 5 of the last 6 quarters, AND average 30 hours @ minimum wage. Thanks to O’care, the 24 hour work weeks will make sure that the unemployment rate never increases while the numbers of Americans falling into despair and underemployment continues to boom.

Thank gawd we are letting in hundreds of thousands of foreigners, what we would we do without them working our minimum wage jobs? Oh yeah, work.

@bb, in my human resource experience, I can tell you that it is a widespread corporate policy to tell EVERYONE that “there job is safe,” right up until the day you get canned – or if you live in a mandatory layoff reporting state, the day you get officially notified.

On the day before we let go of 75% of our staff and closed 4 out of 5 offices, weekly meetings went on as normal and even though EVERY executive knew (I wasn’t told until after hours on Friday and I had to shut down the Indianapolis office in person) it was all a moot point.

The “experts” and psych professionals say it is better that way, and they maybe right, but it still sucks.