⚡️Update: Destination Maternity Inc. ($DEST)⚡️

Speaking of ugly…

In the aforementioned October CBL update, we wrote:

The last thing CBL needed — on the heals of the downgrade — was near-instantaneous bad news. It got it this week.

Yesterday, the bankruptcy court granted interim approval authorizing Destination Maternity Corporation ($DEST) to assume a consulting agreement with Gordon Brothers Retail Partners LLC. Gordon Brothers will be tasked with multiple phases of store closures. Among those implicated? CBL, of course:

3.png

CBL is landlord to DEST on 16 properties that are slated for rejection. Considering that DEST cops to being party to above-market leases, this ought to result in a real economic hit to CBL as (a) it will lose a high-paying tenant, (b) it will take time to replace those boxes, and (c) it is highly unlikely to obtain tenants at as favorable rents.

Let’s pour one out for CBL, folks. The hits just keep on coming.

On Friday, Destination Maternity filed a motion seeking approval of a stalking horse bidder for its assets. In September’s “🤔Is it a "Destination" if Nobody Goes?🤔,” we concluded:

And so we’ll have to wait and see whether Greenhill can pull a rabbit out of their hats. Unfortunately, this is looking like another dour retail story. This looks like a liquidating ABL if we’ve ever seen one.

According to the motion, Greenhill dug deep. They reached out to over 180 potential buyers, executed 50 CAs, and granted due diligence access to nearly two dozen parties.* They also conducted 8 management presentations with potential bidders. If you’ve ever wondered why investment bankers make what they make, this ought to illustrate why: it can be a lot of work trying to garner interest and herd cats. Then again, they did accept a mandate where there was a questionable likelihood that the asset value would clear the debt. 🤔

Unfortunately, the result is not — as predicted — particularly stellar. To be clear, this isn’t a reflection upon Greenhill. This was a difficult assignment in a challenging retail environment: it’s a reflection of that.

And so Marquee Brands LLC** and a contractual joint venture between Hilco Merchant Resources LLC and Gordon Brothers Retail Partners LLC (together, the “Agent”) entered into an asset purchase agreement (APA) with the debtors pursuant to which they will purchase “the Debtors’ e-commerce business, intellectual property, store-in-store operations, and the right to designate the sale of certain inventory and related assets” for an estimated $50mm (subject to adjustments). Repeat: an estimated $50mm. The Agent will liquidate the company’s inventory, fixtures and equipment and conduct store closing sales at the 235 stores where closing sales are not already in process. Said another way: the company’s retail footprint is going the way of the dodo. Clearly this isn’t credit positive for CBL and other landlords.

To refresh everyone’s recollection, here is what the company’s capital structure looked like at the time of its bankruptcy filing:

4.png

We previously noted when highlighting the aggressive milestones baked into Wells Fargo Bank’s consent to use its cash collateral:

Wells clearly wants this sucker off its books in 2019.

Rightfully so. The $50mm purchase price is subject to a $4mm holdback. In other words, the actual value transfer may be approximately $46mm. That puts the purchase price at riiiiiiiiiiiiight around Wells Fargo’s exposure. Its aggressive handling of the case appears to be warranted: this thing looks a hair away from administrative insolvency.

Apropos, the official committee for unsecured creditors — in a grasp for some sort of relevance here — filed a limited objection to the motion. The committee argued that the break-up fee (3.5%) and expense reimbursement (up to $750k) were unwarranted given the size of the bid and the lack of a going concern offer.

They were shot down. They did, however, wrestle some concessions. They apparently got the purchase price increased by $225k (in exchange for avoidance actions) and an additional $225k to be paid to 503(b)(9) admin claimants prior to Wells getting its money. A small victory but something for some creditors here.

And that ladies and gentlemen is what bankruptcy boils down to. Is there value? And if so, who gets it? Here, it’s hard to see any real winners. Not the company. Not Wells. Not CBL and the company’s other landlords. Not vendors. Or suppliers. Or employees. Or, really, even the professionals (for once). Time will tell whether Marquee can do something with this brand that makes it one of the rare winners. It’s not clear from the papers how much of the $50mm is attributable to them and, therefore, how much they’re putting at risk. Clearly nobody else was comfortable with the risk here. However you quantify it.

*At the time of filing, the numbers were 170 parties contacted and 34 executed CAs. So, there wasn’t much additional interest in the assets post-filing.

**Marquee Brands also owns BCBG which, itself, traversed the bankruptcy process not long ago.

😬Decreased Birth Rates, Diminished Sales & Distressed Signs: Destination Maternity Deteriorates (Short Turnaround BoD Types)😬

https___bucketeer-e05bbc84-baa3-437e-9518-adb32be77984.s3.amazonaws.com_public_images_17077bea-a9bc-42e1-8547-b8955caad067_480x270.gif

Per NPR:

The U.S. birthrate fell again in 2018, to 3,788,235 births — representing a 2% drop from 2017. It's the lowest number of births in 32 years, according to a new federal report. The numbers also sank the U.S. fertility rate to a record low.

Not since 1986 has the U.S. seen so few babies born. And it's an ongoing slump: 2018 was the fourth consecutive year of birth declines, according to the provisional birthrate report from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Birthrates fell for nearly all racial and age groups, with only slight gains for women in their late 30s and early 40s, the CDC says.

These statistics must really suck for any business that generates revenue off of the maternity cohort.

Enter Destination Maternity Corporation ($DEST), a retailer of maternity apparel with a nationwide chain of specialty stores. As of May 4, 2019, the Moorestown New Jersey company had 998 retail locations, including 452 stores in the US, Canada and Puerto Rico, and an additional 546 leased departments located within department stores (eg., Macy’sBoscov’s) throughout the US and Canada. It has also been kicking around on distressed retail lists for quite some time now. Unfortunately, the business keeps deteriorating: last week the company joined a recent retail wave and reported some truly dogsh*t numbers.

The company reported Q1 ‘19 results that included (i) $94.2mm in sales, a $9mm YOY decrease (-8.7%), (ii) a 5.2% comp store sales decline, (iii) an 12.5% e-commerce sales decline, (iv) increased inventory (+$5.7mm), and (v) increased debt levels and interest expense (up ~$300K). Sales declines permeated throughout the enterprise, including leased department store sales. The only uptick in sales was in wholesale, which is primarily done through Amazon Inc. ($AMZN). On the plus side, the company enjoyed increased gross margin and meaningfully decreased SG&A (down 6.5%). Gross margin increased due to a pullback in promotional activity; nevertheless, gross profit declined by 6.9% due to the overall decrease in sales. As for SG&A, the reduction is attributable to employees getting the shaft and the company shedding leases like its 2019. Indeed, the company cut 32 stores and 88 leased department locations in the twelve month period. While the company wouldn’t articulate its portfolio strategy going forward, the company did expressly state that it expects additional store closures through the end of 2019.

So, what’s the debt look like? Well, for starters, this is a public company and so we don’t have a private equity sponsor strangling the company with too much debt, dividend recapitalizations, management fees and any of that other fun stuff. So, here, the company doesn’t have a patsy to blame for its woeful performance. Only itself and its revolving door of management teams.

The company’s capital structure looks like this:

  • $50mm ‘23 Revolving Credit Facility (of which $26.2mm is funded and $6.297mm is outstanding as letters of credit)(Agent: Wells Fargo Bank NA). The company has $10.1mm of availability pursuant to its borrowing base limitation. In other words, the company’s lenders are increasingly minimizing their exposure by limiting the company’s ability to borrow the full extent of the committed facility. Indeed, the facility was, in connection with a 2018 amend and extend exercise, ratcheted down from $70mm. The lenders aren’t fooling around here. The weighted interest rate is 4.53%.

  • $25mm ‘23 Term Loan Facility (Agent: Pathlight Capital LLC). The interest rate is LIBOR plus 9%.

  • The company has a couple of other financing agreements totaling approximately $4mm.


THIS IS A SUBSCRIBER’S POST, TO READ MORE OF THIS ARTICLE, CLICK HERE AND SUBSCRIBE TO OUR @$$KICKING NEWSLETTER (DISRUPT THE COMPETITION WITH PETITION)