I hope that you had a wonderful Christmas. Today Sears Holdings announced that they are closing 100-120 stores and that they will be selling the inventory and real estate to raise cash. While the market has reacted unfavorably to this announcement, we see it as a huge positive from an investor’s point of view. When Eddie Lampert (Chairman of Sears) took over the company about 8 years ago, many thought that Sears would basically be closed and liquidated to monetize the real estate assets and brands. Lampert who was a self-professed Buffett admirer, actually faced the same problem that Buffett faced when he took over the Berkshire Hathaway textile operations. These giant enterprises had thousands or in Sears case, tens of thousands of employees, and the social and moral costs of shutting down outweighed the short term financial gains that could be had. Both Buffett and Lampert tried to turn the companies operations into profitable enterprise, but neither Berkshire’s textile business or Sears, were able to earn an adequate return on invested capital so basically they were delaying the inevitable.
As an investor we will benefit because Sears is now doing the things that they have to do to stay afloat and to maximize the value for shareholders. Lampert owns 60% of the company so his interests are squarely aligned with our interests. He is spinning off Orchard Supply which deserves a higher multiple than Sears of Kmart. He is expanding the Kenmore, Craftsman, and Diehard, brands which will enhance the value and cash flows that can be derived from them. Sears has become one of the most successful online retailers, and their growth in this market should continue to strengthen as housing improves due to their large presence in the appliances market. Lastly and most importantly, he is shutting down underperforming stores and monetizing the real estate. There are so many variables that the market will take some time to appreciate the news but I think this is really the starting point to much better things for a shareholder’s perspective, but I certainly appreciate that it is never fun to see more layoffs in an already cruddy economy. Below is an excerpt from the 1985 Berkshire Hathaway Shareholder letter where he describes the shutdown of the textile operations, and I think you’ll see a lot of similarities with how the decision making has gone with Sears. Thank you very much!
Shutdown of Textile Business
In July we decided to close our textile operation, and by
yearend this unpleasant job was largely completed. The history
of this business is instructive.
When Buffett Partnership, Ltd., an investment partnership of
which I was general partner, bought control of Berkshire Hathaway
21 years ago, it had an accounting net worth of $22 million, all
devoted to the textile business. The company’s intrinsic
business value, however, was considerably less because the
textile assets were unable to earn returns commensurate with
their accounting value. Indeed, during the previous nine years
(the period in which Berkshire and Hathaway operated as a merged
company) aggregate sales of $530 million had produced an
aggregate loss of $10 million. Profits had been reported from
time to time but the net effect was always one step forward, two
steps back.
At the time we made our purchase, southern textile plants –
largely non-union – were believed to have an important
competitive advantage. Most northern textile operations had
closed and many people thought we would liquidate our business as
well.
We felt, however, that the business would be run much better
by a long-time employee whom. we immediately selected to be
president, Ken Chace. In this respect we were 100% correct: Ken
and his recent successor, Garry Morrison, have been excellent
managers, every bit the equal of managers at our more profitable
businesses.
In early 1967 cash generated by the textile operation was
used to fund our entry into insurance via the purchase of
National Indemnity Company. Some of the money came from earnings
and some from reduced investment in textile inventories,
receivables, and fixed assets. This pullback proved wise:
although much improved by Ken’s management, the textile business
never became a good earner, not even in cyclical upturns.
Further diversification for Berkshire followed, and
gradually the textile operation’s depressing effect on our
overall return diminished as the business became a progressively
smaller portion of the corporation. We remained in the business
for reasons that I stated in the 1978 annual report (and
summarized at other times also): “(1) our textile businesses are
very important employers in their communities, (2) management has
been straightforward in reporting on problems and energetic in
attacking them, (3) labor has been cooperative and understanding
in facing our common problems, and (4) the business should
average modest cash returns relative to investment.” I further
said, “As long as these conditions prevail – and we expect that
they will – we intend to continue to support our textile business
despite more attractive alternative uses for capital.”
It turned out that I was very wrong about (4). Though 1979
was moderately profitable, the business thereafter consumed major
amounts of cash. By mid-1985 it became clear, even to me, that
this condition was almost sure to continue. Could we have found
a buyer who would continue operations, I would have certainly
preferred to sell the business rather than liquidate it, even if
that meant somewhat lower proceeds for us. But the economics
that were finally obvious to me were also obvious to others, and
interest was nil.
I won’t close down businesses of sub-normal profitability
merely to add a fraction of a point to our corporate rate of
return. However, I also feel it inappropriate for even an
exceptionally profitable company to fund an operation once it
appears to have unending losses in prospect. Adam Smith would
disagree with my first proposition, and Karl Marx would disagree
with my second; the middle ground is the only position that
leaves me comfortable.
I should reemphasize that Ken and Garry have been
resourceful, energetic and imaginative in attempting to make our
textile operation a success. Trying to achieve sustainable
profitability, they reworked product lines, machinery
configurations and distribution arrangements. We also made a
major acquisition, Waumbec Mills, with the expectation of
important synergy (a term widely used in business to explain an
acquisition that otherwise makes no sense). But in the end
nothing worked and I should be faulted for not quitting sooner.
A recent Business Week article stated that 250 textile mills have
closed since 1980. Their owners were not privy to any
information that was unknown to me; they simply processed it more
objectively. I ignored Comte’s advice – “the intellect should be
the servant of the heart, but not its slave” – and believed what
I preferred to believe.
The domestic textile industry operates in a commodity
business, competing in a world market in which substantial excess
capacity exists. Much of the trouble we experienced was
attributable, both directly and indirectly, to competition from
foreign countries whose workers are paid a small fraction of the
U.S. minimum wage. But that in no way means that our labor force
deserves any blame for our closing. In fact, in comparison with
employees of American industry generally, our workers were poorly
paid, as has been the case throughout the textile business. In
contract negotiations, union leaders and members were sensitive
to our disadvantageous cost position and did not push for
unrealistic wage increases or unproductive work practices. To
the contrary, they tried just as hard as we did to keep us
competitive. Even during our liquidation period they performed
superbly. (Ironically, we would have been better off financially
if our union had behaved unreasonably some years ago; we then
would have recognized the impossible future that we faced,
promptly closed down, and avoided significant future losses.)
Over the years, we had the option of making large capital
expenditures in the textile operation that would have allowed us
to somewhat reduce variable costs. Each proposal to do so looked
like an immediate winner. Measured by standard return-on-
investment tests, in fact, these proposals usually promised
greater economic benefits than would have resulted from
comparable expenditures in our highly-profitable candy and
newspaper businesses.
But the promised benefits from these textile investments
were illusory. Many of our competitors, both domestic and
foreign, were stepping up to the same kind of expenditures and,
once enough companies did so, their reduced costs became the
baseline for reduced prices industrywide. Viewed individually,
each company’s capital investment decision appeared cost-
effective and rational; viewed collectively, the decisions
neutralized each other and were irrational (just as happens when
each person watching a parade decides he can see a little better
if he stands on tiptoes). After each round of investment, all
the players had more money in the game and returns remained
anemic.
Thus, we faced a miserable choice: huge capital investment
would have helped to keep our textile business alive, but would
have left us with terrible returns on ever-growing amounts of
capital. After the investment, moreover, the foreign competition
would still have retained a major, continuing advantage in labor
costs. A refusal to invest, however, would make us increasingly
non-competitive, even measured against domestic textile
manufacturers. I always thought myself in the position described
by Woody Allen in one of his movies: “More than any other time in
history, mankind faces a crossroads. One path leads to despair
and utter hopelessness, the other to total extinction. Let us
pray we have the wisdom to choose correctly.”
For an understanding of how the to-invest-or-not-to-invest
dilemma plays out in a commodity business, it is instructive to
look at Burlington Industries, by far the largest U.S. textile
company both 21 years ago and now. In 1964 Burlington had sales
of $1.2 billion against our $50 million. It had strengths in
both distribution and production that we could never hope to
match and also, of course, had an earnings record far superior to
ours. Its stock sold at 60 at the end of 1964; ours was 13.
Burlington made a decision to stick to the textile business,
and in 1985 had sales of about $2.8 billion. During the 1964-85
period, the company made capital expenditures of about $3
billion, far more than any other U.S. textile company and more
than $200-per-share on that $60 stock. A very large part of the
expenditures, I am sure, was devoted to cost improvement and
expansion. Given Burlington’s basic commitment to stay in
textiles, I would also surmise that the company’s capital
decisions were quite rational.
Nevertheless, Burlington has lost sales volume in real
dollars and has far lower returns on sales and equity now than 20
years ago. Split 2-for-1 in 1965, the stock now sells at 34 —
on an adjusted basis, just a little over its $60 price in 1964.
Meanwhile, the CPI has more than tripled. Therefore, each share
commands about one-third the purchasing power it did at the end
of 1964. Regular dividends have been paid but they, too, have
shrunk significantly in purchasing power.
This devastating outcome for the shareholders indicates what
can happen when much brain power and energy are applied to a
faulty premise. The situation is suggestive of Samuel Johnson’s
horse: “A horse that can count to ten is a remarkable horse – not
a remarkable mathematician.” Likewise, a textile company that
allocates capital brilliantly within its industry is a remarkable
textile company – but not a remarkable business.
My conclusion from my own experiences and from much
observation of other businesses is that a good managerial record
(measured by economic returns) is far more a function of what
business boat you get into than it is of how effectively you row
(though intelligence and effort help considerably, of course, in
any business, good or bad). Some years ago I wrote: “When a
management with a reputation for brilliance tackles a business
with a reputation for poor fundamental economics, it is the
reputation of the business that remains intact.” Nothing has
since changed my point of view on that matter. Should you find
yourself in a chronically-leaking boat, energy devoted to
changing vessels is likely to be more productive than energy
devoted to patching leaks.
INVESTING IN THE FINANCIAL MARKETS INVOLVES RISKS. OPTIONS ARE NOT SUITABLE FOR ALL INVESTORS.