2018 bankruptcy
On October 10, 2018, it was reported that Sears Holdings had engaged advisors regarding an imminent bankruptcy filing.[44][45]
The company filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection on October 15, 2018, in New York; the same day that a $134 million debt payment was due,[46] and will close 142 stores, including 63 Kmart stores and 79 Sears stores.
All other Kmart and Sears stores are staying open to turn the company around. Their online stores sears.com, kmart.com, and shopyourway.com are also staying open to serve members affected by the store closures.[47] On the same day, Lampert announced that he was stepping down as CEO, remaining chairman of the board. He also announced that CFO Robert A. Riecker, CDO Leena Munjal, and apparel and footwear segment president Greg Ladley would collectively share the responsibilities of CEO in his place.[48]
After hitting below $1 per share due to bankruptcy filing, Sears Holdings was delisted from NASDAQ on October 24, 2018[49] and became listed on OTC Pink.
On November 8, 2018, Sears Holdings announced it would close an additional 40 Kmart and Sears stores.[50]
On November 23, 2018, Sears Holdings released a list of 505 stores, including 239 Kmart stores and 266 Sears stores, that are for sale in the bankruptcy process while all others are currently holding liquidation sales.[51]
On December 28, 2018, Sears Holdings announced that it would close an additional 80 Kmart and Sears stores, as it faces possible liquidation.[52] Their deadline for a bid was December 28, 2018 at 4:00pm; if no offers are made for the company, it could face liquidation of the entire operation. During the last few minutes of the auction, Lampert sent a $4.6 billion bid to try to keep the dying company alive. He plans to keep 425 locations open, including 202 Kmart stores and 223 Sears stores, with 50,000 employees.[53]
Sears Holdings announced on January 16, 2019, that Lampert (through his hedge fund, ESL Investments) had won the bankruptcy auction, allowing the company to remain open.[54]
On January 24, 2019, a group of unsecured creditors, that included Simon Property Group, filed a motion with the bankruptcy court to overturn the deal Sears Holdings had just made with Lampert claiming that Lampert had been "engaged in serial asset stripping" of the company at the expense of suppliers and landlords. The creditors want the bankruptcy court to force the company to liquidate instead.[55]
On January 28, 2019, the federal government operated Pension Benefit Guaranty Corporation announced that they were not in favor with the current Sears Holding agreement with Lampert since that agreement would create a $1.7 billion funding gap in the employee pension fund that would require the American taxpayers to cover the shortfall.[56] The same federal agency also accused "Lampert of structuring the deal to inappropriately obtain ownership of the chain's Kenmore appliance brand and the Diehard tools brand."[57]
On February 7, 2019, a bankruptcy judge approved a $5.2 billion plan by Sears' chairman and biggest shareholder to keep the iconic business going. The approval means roughly 425 stores and 45,000 jobs will be preserved.[58] As a result, the retail business has emerged into Transform Holdco LLC.
On May 24, 2019, Sears announced it was opening small stores under the name Sears Home&Life. These stores would mainly sell appliances, mattresses, connected home products. This was done at three locations: Overland Park, Kansas, Anchorage, Alaska, and in Lafayette, Louisiana.[59]
On June 28, 2019, it was reported that Sears Holdings had plans to fully dissolve after selling its retail assets to ESL Investments a few months prior.[60]
In March 2019, Sears Holdings sued Transform Holdco LLC for $57.5 million it said it was owed from the sale. The company also said Transform owed it $41.3 million for credit card and cash transactions that occurred before the sale closed, as well as $16.2 million for a portion of February rent, according to the documents. Sears Holdings could not be reached for additional comment.[61] The lawsuit was settled in January 2020.[62] The Chapter 11 proceedings (Case No. 18-23538) were overseen by Judge Robert D. Drain in the Southern District of New York, with Weil, Gotshal & Manges LLP serving as lead debtor's counsel under partner Jacqueline Marcus. The Official Committee of Unsecured Creditors was represented by Akin Gump Strauss Hauer & Feld LLP, with Ira S. Dizengoff and Philip C. Dublin as lead attorneys. Following confirmation of the liquidation plan, the Sears Liquidating Trust pursued thousands of preference and fraudulent transfer actions against former vendors and creditors nationwide, engaging a range of firms including Weil Gotshal, Morgan, Lewis & Bockius LLP, and the Law Office of Mark S. Roher, P.A. to manage recovery litigation across multiple jurisdictions.[63]
On October 29, 2022, Sears Holdings emerged from bankruptcy.[64]