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- <text id=90TT0201>
- <title>
- Jan. 22, 1990: How Do You Spell Relief?
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1990
- Jan. 22, 1990 A Murder In Boston
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- BUSINESS, Page 48
- How Do You Spell Relief?
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>With his empire on the brink of bankruptcy, Campeau loses his
- command
- </p>
- <p>By John Greenwald--Reported by Mary Cronin/New York and James
- L. Graff/Ottawa
- </p>
- <p> In the early-morning chill last Thursday, a line swiftly
- lengthened outside Bloomingdale's department store in New York
- City. But these were not shoppers eager to get the first crack
- at a sale in the chic emporium. They were merchandise suppliers
- clamoring to collect their money from Bloomie's, the
- centerpiece of Robert Campeau's troubled empire. After the
- store offices opened at 8 a.m., some 400 red-eyed vendors
- marched inside to pick up their checks.
- </p>
- <p> Their determination was understandable. Campeau's American
- operations are tottering near bankruptcy, and the
- Bloomingdale's chain is up for sale. The setbacks have
- devastated Campeau, 66, a brash Canadian developer who became
- the most powerful retailer in the U.S. when he acquired Allied
- Stores and Federated Department Stores in 1980s takeover
- fights. Included in the deals were such prominent chains as
- Jordan Marsh, Bon Marche, Abraham & Straus and Burdines. But
- while the raids made Campeau a high-rolling business celebrity,
- they left his Toronto-based Campeau Corp. with more than $10
- billion of leveraged-buyout debt and interest charges so high
- that the stores could not produce enough income to meet them.
- </p>
- <p> The company is lurching from crisis to crisis. Campeau Corp.
- managed to scrape together $100 million last week to meet the
- deadline for paying suppliers who shipped the 257 U.S. stores
- everything from tank tops to tiaras. This week the firm hopes
- to persuade Citibank and other major lenders to roll over $2.3
- billion of loans. But even if the creditors agree, the Canadian
- company must put its U.S. retail operations on a sound
- financial footing by taking drastic steps to trim costs and
- sell properties. Observes Wilbur Ross, senior managing director
- of the Wall Street firm Rothschild Inc. and an adviser to
- Federated bondholders: "The Campeau people have to get all the
- pieces together at once to solve this problem. The stores can
- get by in the period after Christmas, but they cannot go
- without spring merchandise."
- </p>
- <p> To reassure creditors, the corporation's directors last week
- banished Robert Campeau from all U.S. operations and said he
- would confine himself to developing Canadian real estate. The
- twelve board members included Albert Reichmann, chairman of
- Olympia & York Developments, a Canadian real estate giant that
- has invested $700 million in Campeau Corp. and holds a 38%
- stake in the company. Emerging from four days of meetings in
- Toronto's pink marble Scotia Plaza, the directors said they had
- vested control of the U.S. stores in a voting trust to be run
- by a board of U.S. trustees.
- </p>
- <p> The shake-up came as Campeau's troubles threatened to spiral
- out of control. Anxious suppliers have refused to sell their
- wares to Campeau units for fear of not being paid. At the same
- time, Campeau's 100,000 U.S. employees are worried about
- layoffs, and many top officers have begun to seek new jobs.
- Says Robert Nesbit, a managing partner at Korn/Ferry, the
- world's largest executive-search firm: "I shudder at what is
- happening. Never before have the proud people at Allied and
- Federated sought us out. Now we are talking to three or four
- top divisional and corporate people every day."
- </p>
- <p> Campeau Corp. disclosed the extent of its financial woes in
- a Securities and Exchange Commission filing last week. The
- company said Allied and Federated would incur net losses for
- the next five years. The report added that even if Campeau
- liquidated all its Allied and Federated stores, it could not
- raise enough cash to pay off its total debts. Meanwhile,
- efforts to sell Bloomingdale's have been disappointing. Campeau
- hoped to get about $1.5 billion for the 17-store subsidiary
- when it went on the block last September, but experts say it may
- fetch less than $1 billion. The most prominent would-be buyer
- is Bloomingdale's Chairman, Marvin Traub, who has been seeking
- Japanese support for a bid for the firm.
- </p>
- <p> For Robert Campeau, the American dream that seemed so
- alluring from north of the border has turned into a nightmare.
- A relentless overachiever, Campeau once noted how, as a boy in
- the bleak mining town of Sudbury, Ont., "I thought any house
- with indoor plumbing was a palace, and I hated the people who
- lived there." At 14 he became a machinist's apprentice, using
- the baptismal certificate of a dead older brother to pass for
- 16. "You have to push yourself to the front of the line,"
- Campeau later noted. He built his first house after World War
- II, and was one of Canada's largest real estate developers in
- the 1970s.
- </p>
- <p> Still barging ahead, Campeau acquired Allied for $3.6
- billion in 1986. He stunned U.S. retailers two years later by
- besting the powerful R.H. Macy & Co. in a $6.6 billion battle
- for Federated. Recalls Jon Levy, chairman of Gillian Group, a
- leading dress manufacturer: "After a while, it became a contest
- of wills and ego. Campeau came to feel that it was a game and
- he had to win the prize." But the price of victory was a debt
- load that included $2.25 billion of junk bonds that pay as much
- as 17.75% interest.
- </p>
- <p> To ease the burden, Campeau Corp. may be forced to take
- refuge in bankruptcy. The move would buy the firm time to trim
- its debt to more tolerable levels. "I think the best bet would
- be to declare bankruptcy to protect the store franchises," says
- Monroe Greenstein, an industry analyst at Bear Stearns. The
- Federated and Allied chains could then operate under bankruptcy
- protection, which would entitle them to suspend interest
- payments and pay suppliers more promptly for their goods. But
- other Campeau watchers reject that strategy. Says Rothschild's
- Ross: "There is relatively little that can be done in
- bankruptcy that cannot be done out of it." He argued that while
- a bankruptcy filing would reduce interest costs, it would
- produce legal and other professional fees that could run to
- millions of dollars a month.
- </p>
- <p> As Campeau Corp. struggled to raise cash, many stores began
- to lure customers with flashy sales. Bloomingdale's has marked
- down its winter merchandise twice, and last week offered spring
- and summer apparel at discounts of as much as 25%. "You just
- don't do that at this time of year," Greenstein notes. "You put
- your summer stuff out, but not on sale."
- </p>
- <p> While quite a few suppliers are still cautiously providing
- goods to Bloomingdale's and other Campeau subsidiaries, the
- threat of new cutoffs hangs over the stores. Notes Bert Hand,
- president of Hartmarx: "These stores are going to end up
- somewhere, whether in the current organization or under new
- ownership. Either way, we want to make sure that we don't lose
- continuity. But on the other hand, we can't put ourselves in
- too much risk."
- </p>
- <p> Most Allied and Federated stores are likely to stay in
- business no matter how Campeau ultimately fares. The chains are
- far better merchandisers than B. Altman, a declining retailer
- shuttered last year by George Herscu, an overleveraged
- Australian raider who acquired the company in 1987. The
- problems at Allied and Federated stemmed from no fault of their
- own but were caused mainly by the audacious price that Campeau
- paid.
- </p>
- <p> Yet Bloomingdale's and other Campeau chains, which operate
- in an extremely competitive industry, could be crippled by the
- financial turmoil. For one thing, the exodus of experienced
- managers comes at a time when department-store retailers are
- under attack from catalog merchants, discounters and specialty
- stores. Moreover, a crunch could occur this spring if Campeau's
- troubles cause more suppliers to defect. Says Gillian's Levy:
- "All I care about now is for the situation to be resolved as
- soon as possible, or Federated will no longer be viable. The
- longer they procrastinate, the longer they go without
- merchandise. Then customers will start going to other stores,
- and Federated will lose them forever."
- </p>
- <p> Many suppliers blame the 1980s buyout binge for the Campeau
- debacle. In the process of arranging enormous loans for
- overreaching raiders, the lenders and investment bankers paid
- little or no attention to whether the buyouts could survive
- over the long haul. The toll has been particularly heavy among
- retailing companies. In a study of 25 retail buyouts between
- 1983 and 1985, the Ernst & Young accounting firm found that
- nearly 40% had gone bankrupt or slashed their operations. For
- big-eyed shoppers like Campeau, the buyouts might have looked
- tempting, but they were hardly bargains.
- </p>
- <p>THE CRUMBLING DOMAIN
- </p>
- <p> The Canadian raider assembled a U.S. retailing empire that
- has 100,000 employees:
- </p>
- <p> FEDERATED: He paid $6.6 billion for the company that now
- includes Abraham & Straus (stores: 14), Bloomingdale's (17),
- Burdines (30), Rich's/Goldsmith's (26) and Lazarus (43);
- </p>
- <p> ALLIED: Campeau paid $3.6 billion for the store group that
- now comprises Bon Marche (39), Jordan Marsh (26), Maas
- Brothers/Jordan Marsh (38) and Stern's (24).
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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