Monday, December 23, 2024

Nordstrom to go private in all-cash $6.25 billion deal. Is it a good move?

Must read

Nordstrom (JWN) is returning to its private roots after years of earnings struggles and investor indifference.

The founding Nordstrom family, who owned a roughly 33% stake, teamed up with retail investor El Puerto de Liverpool, owner of a 10% stake, to take the company private. El Puerto is a real estate and department store conglomerate that has boutiques with known names like Gap, Banana Republic, and Williams Sonoma, among others, in addition to department stores and other format retailers.

Both will acquire all outstanding shares in an all-cash deal valued at about $6.25 billion.

The 123-year-old retailer, based in Seattle, Wash., has 381 locations, including 93 Nordstrom and 280 Rack locations, a growing business for the brand.

Following the close of the transaction, expected in the first half of 2025, the Nordstrom family will have a majority ownership stake. Two-thirds of the company’s shareholders must approve the deal.

Each shareholder will get $24.25 cash for each share held. The offer price, a hair above the current stock price of $24.19, is a nearly 36% premium to where shares started the year at $17.78.

Morningstar analyst David Swartz was “disappointed by the final offer as it is well below” his $38.50 per share valuation.

In 2018, the company’s board rejected the Nordstrom family’s offer to take it private at around $50 per share. Its net earnings have dropped 76% from 2018 to 2023.

But Swartz expects the deal to go through “at the proposed price” since the Nordstrom board of directors, including Erik and Pete Nordstrom, unanimously approved the deal and there has been a “lack of any (apparent) opposition.”

Swartz thinks both the Nordstrom family and El Puerto de Liverpool are getting a “good deal” despite his misgivings about the price.

“Although we do not expect opposition, we are disappointed that shareholders will not receive a price closer to our prior valuation and believe that the Nordstroms and El Puerto de Liverpool are acquiring Nordstrom at a time when its results are depressed,” he added.

Yet, he believes that “public shareholders have been unwilling to give strong valuations to department store companies.”

The company has been posting positive growth recently.

Nordstrom’s third quarter same-store sales grew 4% for the namesake brand. Sales at its off-price business, Nordstrom Rack, grew 3.9%.

Analysts estimate Nordstrom’s full-year fiscal 2024 sales at $14.5 billion, slightly more than the $14.2 billion last year.

Latest article