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Kmart’s Acquisition of Sears Is Completed After Shareholders’ OK

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From Associated Press

Kmart Holding Corp. bought Sears, Roebuck & Co. for $12.3 billion Thursday, combining two faded retail icons whose sales have been declining for years into the nation’s third-biggest retailer with $55 billion in annual sales.

Shareholders signed off on the deal in separate meetings at Sears’ suburban Chicago headquarters, which now becomes the base for a company that adopts the name Sears Holdings Corp. It trails only Wal-Mart Stores Inc. and Home Depot Inc. among U.S. retailers.

The votes capped off the stunning proposal unveiled four months earlier by Kmart Chairman Edward Lampert, the billionaire hedge fund manager who was the largest individual shareholder in each company.

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Lampert, who helped Troy, Mich.-based Kmart turn a $1.1-billion profit last year with the aid of real estate transactions, denied that he had a big sell-off in mind for Sears assets and said the new company “goes beyond being an investment.”

“It’s an opportunity to transform two companies that once were great -- to transform them into a great company relative to the 21st century,” he said after the meetings.

“I think there’s a presumption that you’re going to see a lot of store closings. That’s a wrong presumption,” he said. “Our program is to keep as many stores open as we can.”

Contending that he had been unfairly labeled as a sell-off specialist, Lampert also denied that the company had put the Lands’ End casual clothing chain on the market, as an industry publication reported this month.

“Lands’ End isn’t for sale,” the 42-year-old Lampert said. “It’s a great American brand, and I think it’s a brand that we could run very, very well.”

The merger brings together some other powerful brands that have succeeded while their companies’ retail results have sagged, among them Craftsman tools, Kenmore appliances and, from Kmart, Martha Stewart, Jaclyn Smith and Joe Boxer.

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Employees have been concerned about widespread job cuts when the new company moves to close stores and convert hundreds of Kmart stores this year to the new Sears Essential convenience-oriented format. But executives said that although some layoffs would be announced by the end of April from among the 5,000 people working at the two firms’ headquarters, the vast majority of the workforce of 400,000 would keep their jobs as Sears Holdings focused on improving retail.

The deal closed shortly after the back-to-back shareholder meetings -- one tame, the other rancorous.

Sixty-nine percent of Kmart shareholders voted to approve the deal in results announced at a sparsely attended session lasting five minutes. About two hours later, Chief Executive Alan Lacy disclosed that Sears shareholders also had voted 69% in favor of the deal -- but he had to endure shouting and insults by former Sears employees upset about the 119-year-old retailer’s acquisition by Kmart.

“This is a sad and dark day for Sears Roebuck,” Doug Liggett, formerly a Sears auto center manager, said at the meeting. “It is unbelievable that Kmart, two years out of bankruptcy, would be strong enough to purchase Sears, a company in business for over a century.”

Some also voiced criticism that Lacy would pocket about $27 million as a result of the merger.

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