CORRECTED - Closing sales begin at all Borders stores

Fri Jul 22, 2011 2:51pm EDT

(Corrects paragraph 3 to remove attribution to Venezia. The information came from a hearing held on Thursday)

* Liquidator confirms sales have started at all 399 stores

* Borders still hopes to sell 35 stores to Books-A-Million

By Nick Brown

NEW YORK, July 22 (Reuters) - Going-out-of-business sales began on Friday at all of Borders Group Inc's BGPIQ.PK 399 stores, according to a spokesman for one of the companies charged with liquidating the nation's second-largest bookstore chain.

A group led by Hilco Merchant Resources and Gordon Brothers Retail Partners began the process of selling off Borders' merchandise and furniture at all stores, said Gordon Brothers spokesman Craig Venezia.

That includes 35 stores that may stay open pending sale negotiations between Borders and Books-A-Million Inc (BAMM.O).

Borders, which filed for bankruptcy in February, gained court approval on Thursday of its plan to end its 40-year business, but said it was in last-minute talks to transfer as many as 35 stores to Books-A-Million, the third-biggest book retailer.

Borders lawyer Andrew Glenn told Reuters on Thursday that there were no hard-and-fast deadlines for finalizing a deal, but said Books-A-Million would like to complete a transaction quickly to avoid losing its would-be inventory to store-closing sales.

It was initially unclear whether liquidators would hold off on the sales to give the parties more time to come to terms on a deal, but Venezia said on Friday that the sales had begun at all stores.

Douglas Markham, Books-A-Million's chief administrative officer, declined to comment on Friday.

A spokeswoman for Borders did not address the closing sales, saying only that the company was "hopeful" for a deal, which could save as many as 1,500 of Borders' nearly 11,000 jobs.

Regardless of whether a deal is reached, the vast majority of Borders' stores will close, leaving retail holes in many major shopping hubs. Borders plans to conduct a separate auction process to find takers for as many of its leases as possible.

The company stands to lose at least the bulk of its 10,700 jobs in what Glenn called a "bittersweet" emergence from bankruptcy.

"There were a lot of sad people, a lot of sadness in the corporate office," Glenn told Judge Martin Glenn, no relation, at U.S. Bankruptcy Court in Manhattan on Thursday.

The company had hoped to sell itself to private equity firm Najafi Cos, which owns the Book-of-the-Month Club, but the deal fell apart amid creditor objections, and no other buyer emerged.

The liquidation process will probably bring in between $250 million and $284 million that the company can use to pay back creditors, Borders said in court papers.

The case is In re Borders Group Inc, U.S. Bankruptcy Court, Southern District of New York, No. 11-10614. (Reporting by Nick Brown; Editing by Lisa Von Ahn)

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Comments (6)
rainman246 wrote:
It’s a sad day when something like this happens. Thousands of Borders employee’s as well as the outside independent resources that assemble and manufacture books will now go out of business.
Even more tragic, is the loss of something much greater. It is yet another loss of one of life’s simple and pure experiences. The pleasure of browsing though the book store, searching in anticipation for an exciting book or mystery, or gently holding the book, with thumb and index touched upon the creased page of last, on a park bench, on a crisp and sunny weekend afternoon. Perhaps later returning home, and placing it in that special slot you’ve reserved for it on your favorite bookshelf. There are many young teenagers as well as adults whom enjoy that peaceful and serene experience publicly and as a culture, most of which chose it as an alternative to an ever degrading internet.
A whole social experience is lost when things like this happen and I believe it should, and could have been prevented. Greed is destroying and desocializing our society and it is a terrible tragedy for our children and their futures. All the so-called social networking has turned into hate filled pages of cyber bullying and has proved detrimental to the young as well as the adults.
Behind that screen of plastic, and soon to be exclusive home for all books, will be another downturn of our children’s and societies’ future. The greed of the digital age will have destroyed yet another one of life’s simple and pure experiences and social interactions. My daughter and her friends will be heartbroken.

Jul 22, 2011 1:53pm EDT  --  Report as abuse
Ired12 wrote:
This is not a commentary on the future of the book, it is sad but it was due to poor management and nothing else. There are plenty that have thrived in this economy( myself included), Amazon will tell you the book business is alive and exceptionally well, so will tons of independent book stores. Anyone can tell you they will always enjoy books, especially children. The ebook is making books in general more viable. This knee jerk reaction that the world is going to hell in hand basket due to one book store closing is ridiculous. Maybe YOU(rainman) should get off it stop blaming other people- read to kids and the elderly, sign up to tutor illiterates, read more yourself. signed, A book store owner.

Jul 22, 2011 2:38pm EDT  --  Report as abuse
jmcgeough wrote:
sad but real… nobody wants to pay the high-street prices for books! Our society has chosen!! and clearly no one gives a damn any more!

Jul 22, 2011 2:47pm EDT  --  Report as abuse
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