2nd UPDATE: Essen Court Approves Karstadt Takeover
September 03 2010 - 9:49AM
Dow Jones News
German department store chain Karstadt Friday was saved from the
brink of insolvency after an Essen court approved a takeover plan
for the retailer signed by billionaire investor Nicholas Berggruen
and the store's creditors.
The Essen district court approved Berggruen's takeover plan for
Karstadt Friday afternoon, eliminating the final legal hurdle in a
months-long saga by Berggruen to acquire Karstadt. Berggruen and
Karstadt's creditors had failed to reach a formal agreement before
a Friday deadline set by the insolvency administrator, but
collected the final signatures needed to close the deal Friday
morning.
The iconic German retailer, a unit of bankrupt holding company
Arcandor AG (ARO.XE), risked being shuttered by its insolvency
administrators if a deal wasn't finalized by the end of the week.
The company employs more than 25,000 staff around Germany and has
stirred public sentiment across the country in recent months amid
fears of lost jobs and the potential demise of a prominent national
brand.
German-American investor Berggruen has since June haggled over
the terms of his deal with creditors ranging from Germany's Valovis
Bank to Highstreet, a real estate consortium headed by Goldman
Sachs Group (GS) which owns 86 of the 120 Karstadt properties.
The negotiations have centered on reductions to Karstadt
property rents and plans to reorganize Karstadt into separate units
including sport and premium stores. Berggruen has said he won't
spin off any unit before 2012.
Berggruen has committed to inject EUR70 million to keep the
department store chain running.
He also plans a partnership with U.S. clothing designer BCBG Max
Azria Group aimed at improving Karstadt's merchandising and fashion
selection.
-By Archibald Preuschat and William Launder, Dow Jones
Newswires; +49(0)6929725515; archibald.preuschat@dowjones.com