Saks bond suffers US$1bil loss before a single payment is made


Saks is seeking more money to shore up its finances, bondholders are nursing almost US$1bil in losses. — Bloomberg

NEW YORK: It was supposed to be just what Saks needed to turn things around.

By taking over struggling rival Neiman Marcus, the pitch went, the iconic retailer would become a luxury powerhouse – one with enough bargaining and pricing power to cut costs and boost profitability.

So when the company turned to the bond market to finance the takeover last December, investors were drawn in.

Sure, there was some scepticism, but a juicy 11% interest rate, pledges on some of its assets and big-time backers including Amazon.com Inc and Salesforce Inc assuaged their concerns. They shelled out US$2.2bil, US$200mil more than Saks originally sought.

Just five months later, the debt is on the verge of collapse.

Saks is seeking more money to shore up its finances, bondholders are nursing almost US$1bil in losses and some have even begun to wonder if they’ll receive a single interest payment.

The sell-off is being turbocharged in part by creditor fears that they could soon be stripped of their collateral or pushed down the repayment priority line as part of any new cash raise, a bare-knuckled tactic known as priming that’s become commonplace on Wall Street in recent years.

Saks’ decision earlier this week to hire Kirkland & Ellis and PJT Partners – two firms well versed in such manoeuvres – to assess its options only exacerbated those concerns, market watchers say.

All of this is coming at a time of turmoil in the retail industry as companies confront higher import costs and a weaker outlook for consumer spending due to US President Donald Trump’s tariffs.

“A number of retailers have been caught flat-footed with the recent tariff turmoil and have been seeking improved liquidity cushions to ride out the uncertainty,” said John Dixon of Dinosaur Financial Group.

He said Saks’ bondholders “would almost certainly lose value” if the company managed to cobble together a sizable new financing arrangement.

Representatives for Saks and Kirkland & Ellis didn’t respond to requests seeking comment, while PJT declined to comment.

Saks’ bonds have been under pressure from almost the day they were sold.

Its longstanding struggles to pay suppliers and maintain inventory continued to weigh on it after the acquisition, and in February the company told vendors it would take more than a year to settle unpaid bills.

In early April, as Trump was rolling out a fresh wave of tariffs on US trading partners, investors responded by dumping Saks’ bonds, pushing them below 80 US cents on the dollar. The retail sector is widely considered among the most vulnerable to Trump’s trade agenda, which threatens to shrink profit margins and potentially upend supply chains.

Volatility in financial markets due to the tariffs could also weigh on spending among high-end shoppers, according to Fitch Ratings analyst David Silverman.

Combined with layoffs in high-paying sectors, that could dent demand for luxury goods. Saks said the economic uncertainty caused by Trump’s trade wars was enough to potentially warrant raising more debt, likely via a so-called first-in, last-out loan under the US$1.8bil borrowing capacity of its existing revolving credit facility.

That prompted its bonds to fall even further, trading down to around 56 US cents on the dollar.

Late last month management held a conference call with investors to update wary money managers. It did little to calm their nerves of rattled investors, some industry insiders said. The company said it had between US$360mil and US$400mil of liquidity, compared to almost US$900mil projected to have been available at the close of the Neiman Marcus acquisition. — Bloomberg

Follow us on our official WhatsApp channel for breaking news alerts and key updates!

Next In Business News

Trading ideas: Geohan, Hartanah Kenyalang, Capital A, AAX, Genting, Quality Concrete, Gadang, Ancom Nylex
Number’s up: Calculators hold out against AI
India warns IndiGo of regulatory action
OMS Energy looks to region, M&A for growth
KLCI futures to see uptrend this week
Swiss population cap proposal gets 50% backing
Bumps in Perodua’s EV march
China’s PBoC extends gold buying streak
TMK Chemical resolute in meeting targets
Colombian women take on�coffee patriarchy

Others Also Read