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Service Merchandise Closing Doors
The Associated Press ^ | Friday, January 4, 2002; 3:38 PM | By John Gerome

Posted on 01/04/2002 12:53:47 PM PST by ABC123

NASHVILLE, Tenn. –– Service Merchandise Co. Inc., a 42-year-old retail chain that has operated under Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection since March 1999, announced Friday that it is going out of business.

Company executives said the weak economy and slow sales after the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks hurt the company's 2001 results and prevented it from completing its planned business reorganization and emergence from bankruptcy.

Service Merchandise, with more than 200 stores in 32 states, reported losses of $180 million in 2000 and as of November had liabilities totaling $1.34 billion and assets of $1 billion.

"Given the extraordinarily poor retail economy this past year, especially for jewelry retailers, our company's prospects for successfully reorganizing were compromised to the point that we and our creditors consensually concluded that winding down the business and distributing the substantial value of our inventory, real estate and other assets to our creditors was in their best interest," chairman and chief executive Sam Cusano said.

"While we wish the final result could have been otherwise, our foremost goal throughout the cases has been to maximize value for our stakeholders and we are doing so through this course of action."

The company says it will fire about 500 of its 9,300 employees in January, with the others receiving staggered termination notices throughout out the year.

The company will begin going-out-of-business sales Jan. 19 at its stores, pending approval by the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the Middle District of Tennessee.

Service Merchandise said it intends to file a plan of liquidation by Sept. 30, to provide for the distribution of the proceeds of its assets to creditors.

The company expects shareholders will not receive any distribution on their common stock in 2002.

Service Merchandise said employee severance and other benefit payments would be paid in accordance with orders from the bankruptcy court.

The company will also sell its real estate, including its headquarters in suburban Nashville, 70 fee-owned properties and 150 unexpired leaseholds.

During the 1970s, Service Merchandise was the nation's top catalog-showroom retailer. At its peak, the company achieved more than $4 billion in annual sales.

In recent years, however, sales at Service Merchandise drastically dropped. The company responded with a series of restructuring plans, starting in 1997.

While changing its retail format, a small group of creditors filed an involuntary petition under Chapter 11 on March 15, 1999, seeking court supervision of the company's restructuring. The company later filed a voluntary Chapter 11 petition and management improved relations with its vendors and stabilized its business.

Over the past two years, Service Merchandise reduced its holdings from about 350 stores to 216 and about 41,000 employees to 9,300.

In February 2000, Service Merchandise discontinued unprofitable product lines such as electronics, toys and sporting goods and focused on jewelry and home products. It also rented its stores to other businesses.

© 2002 The Associated Press


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Miscellaneous
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After working there for 23 years, I knew it was time to go.
1 posted on 01/04/2002 12:53:48 PM PST by ABC123
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To: ABC123
It confounded me that Service Merchandise got rid of its electronics section a couple years ago because whenever I'd been in one of their stores that's where all the customers were. It seemed to me they closed the wrong department. Then when I went there this Christmas, the store was virtually devoid of shoppers. Once again it appears a retailer has done it to itself. Jewelry sales would never have saved them and the other departments were common department store stuff that had little or no draw.
2 posted on 01/04/2002 1:00:20 PM PST by Lady Jag
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To: ABC123
K-mart is next, then Amazon, and Lucent...
3 posted on 01/04/2002 1:07:01 PM PST by ken5050
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To: ABC123
I worked there for five years during the late 80s, early 90s while attending high school and college. I knew it was only a matter of time before they went out of business after I left. ;-)
4 posted on 01/04/2002 1:11:04 PM PST by Azzurri
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To: ABC123
I always liked the weird way they made you pick up your stuff, with the clipboards and such.
5 posted on 01/04/2002 1:15:52 PM PST by AmishDude
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To: AmishDude
I always liked the weird way they made you pick up your stuff...

I always hated the weird way they made you pick up your stuff. That kind of store has vanished.

6 posted on 01/04/2002 1:19:49 PM PST by js1138
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To: ABC123
One factor in their demise was the terrible way they treated vendors. I was in on negotiations with them on providing products or services three separate times over ten years, and every time it appeared that SM was not satisfied with the deal unless the vendor was losing money. It got so that no respectable company in Nashville would do business with them.
7 posted on 01/04/2002 1:29:20 PM PST by Joe Bonforte
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To: ABC123
Service Merchandise has been on life support for years. Looks like the creditors finally got tired of holding out hope for recovery and pulled the plug.

Always thought it was a strange name, for they hardly provided service (find it in the catalog yourself, fill out a form, stand in line and wait for them to find the item in the storeroom seemed to be their extent of service).

8 posted on 01/04/2002 1:39:07 PM PST by anymouse
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To: ABC123
I am happy to see that weirdo store go! What was with filing out slips and all of that?

Next on my wish list is Radio Shack - everything they sell is crap, and they need your name and address to sell you a AAA battery.

9 posted on 01/04/2002 1:41:41 PM PST by dead
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To: anymouse
...for they hardly provided service...

Well, they sure drove me away with thier "service"! I'm delighted! Last time I was stupid enough to shop there, I predicted to one of the managers that they wouldn't last another year. They didn't. Nuyk nuyk nuyk.

10 posted on 01/04/2002 1:44:08 PM PST by GingisK
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To: sciencediet
I agree. Every time I went there, they had a decent electronics department, and most of the people in the store were there. Whoever decided to close SM's electronics department was a complete bonehead.

Oh well, time to get ready for the clearance sales!

11 posted on 01/04/2002 1:45:30 PM PST by JoeMomma
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To: Joe Bonforte
"...every time it appeared that SM was not satisfied with the deal unless the vendor was losing money. It got so that no respectable company in Nashville would do business with them."

I know the type. My guess would be that you could have added "...no respectable company in Nashville or anywhere else, for that matter, would do business with them."

Companies that expect vendors / partners to lose money in order to do business with them are invariably going to come up on the losing end eventually. It's a competitive world out there, and smart companies craft deals that are true win-win arrangements. You screw your "partners", you run out of "partners" REAL quick.

12 posted on 01/04/2002 1:46:02 PM PST by RightOnline
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To: dead
"Next on my wish list is Radio Shack - everything they sell is crap, and they need your name and address to sell you a AAA battery."

That's why you should give them a bogus address like I do.

13 posted on 01/04/2002 1:46:54 PM PST by JoeMomma
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To: GingisK
Well, they sure drove me away with thier "service"!

Actually, I really never had a problem with their stores near where I lived in Jacksonville, Chicago, and now in Memphis. I've actually had quite good experiences there.

Once I was ordering a pretty nice (for SM) bookshelf that was a clearance item, The only one available in Memphis was a floor model that had scratches everywhere on it.

Of course, it was priced about $100, while it's regular price was about $200-250, I believe.

I called around, and Paducah's store had a perfect model of the shelf. However, they had a policy that they didn't ship clearance merchandise between stores, but the Paducah manager went ahead and put it on a truck to Memphis, and they didn't even charge me a shipping charge for it. They charged me $100 and I had a bookshelf better than the scratched-up floor model they had.

I'd done Christmas shopping with them every Christmas since, and have always had good experiences with them every time.

14 posted on 01/04/2002 1:53:43 PM PST by JoeMomma
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To: JoeMomma
Yeah, Joe, same here; I give them my former address, and never get a "flier" from them. And to the other above poster, you're correct sir; they only sell poor quality products.....
15 posted on 01/04/2002 1:55:43 PM PST by Malcolm
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To: RightOnline
"Companies that expect vendors / partners to lose money in order to do business with them are invariably going to come up on the losing end eventually. It's a competitive world out there, and smart companies craft deals that are true win-win arrangements. You screw your "partners", you run out of "partners" REAL quick."

So many companies and business professionals do not realize the importance of good vendor relations, because often they are as important as your customers in being successful in business.

16 posted on 01/04/2002 1:56:38 PM PST by JoeMomma
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To: ken5050
I disagree with you on Amazon.com going out of business. They haven't turned a profit yet due mainly to the reinvestment of revenues into infrastructure. They were about to turn one last year but the dot.com implosion set them back a bit. I think they might surprise everybody and show a profit sometime this coming fiscal year. Unlike most dot.coms, this is no house of cards. They are selling real products and offer real services. For example, I won't buy a book or a CD anymore unless I check the reviews on Amazon.com first. Then I usually buy it through them.

On the con side, Amazon.com was definitely overvalued on the stock market. And they expanded into other areas too recklessly. Everybody knows them for books and music. When they started selling garden rakes and other gardening tools, what the hell were they thinking? I go to Home Depot for that stuff. Who's going to pay to have a step ladder shipped to their house?

If Amazon.com is unable to turn a profit, look for them to get snapped up somebody like Wal-Mart. They are definitely not going away however.

As for Service Merchandise, it never did have that "status symbol" name brand that is so important for jewelry. If you buy your girlfriend an engagement ring or watch there, you certainly aren't going to tell her where you bought it from. Might as well tell her you got it from a gumball machine at the penny arcade. It just has no "class appeal." As for electronics and consumer appliances, Circuit City and Wal-Mart destroyed them. I'm sure that's why those sections started disappearing.

17 posted on 01/04/2002 1:57:31 PM PST by SamAdams76
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To: JoeMomma
Of course, but it's just as much a waste of my time to give them a phoney address as a real one.
18 posted on 01/04/2002 1:58:19 PM PST by dead
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To: SamAdams76
From a retail standpoint, it was terrible service. Fill out a slip, often without being able to even examine the product, and then pay for it. THEN wait about 20 minutes for it to come down a conveyor belt, only half the time it NEVER came.

Good riddance to a sorry company, IMHO.

19 posted on 01/04/2002 2:02:08 PM PST by Dog Gone
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To: dead
Next on my wish list is Radio Shack - everything they sell is crap, and they need your name and address to sell you a AAA battery.

Bigtime! What a crappy and horrible place. The employees are right off the street and are totally clueless about the overpriced goods that they carry. I only go there a few times when I need something simple like a phone jack or audio cables. Even then, I always seem to get an employee on his first day, and he's got to punch in a zillion things on the register to ring up the one item. When it comes time for the inevitable address information, I just feed him completely fictitious addresses like 6969 Skyline Drive and try not to laugh as he dutifully takes it down.

20 posted on 01/04/2002 2:05:24 PM PST by SamAdams76
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