tool name

close
tool goes here

Best Buy co-founder offers to buy company, take it private

NEW YORK — Best Buy’s co-founder is looking to make a buy of his own, offering to take the electronics seller private only months after leaving as the company’s chairman.

Published: Aug. 7, 2012 at 12:05 a.m. PDT
0 comments

NEW YORK — Best Buy’s co-founder is looking to make a buy of his own, offering to take the electronics seller private only months after leaving as the company’s chairman.

Best Buy said it would consider the offer but called it “highly conditional.” And analysts are skeptical that former Chairman Richard Schulze’s opening offer of $24 to $26 per share would get a deal done and that it could be tricky to line up investment firms to help pay for it.

It’s the latest twist in the Minneapolis company’s struggles to stay relevant as more people buy electronics online. Over the past year, it has announced a major restructuring plan and fired CEO Brian Dunn amid allegations that he had an inappropriate relationship with a female employee.

Best Buy is trying to avoid the fate of its rival Circuit City, which went bankrupt in 2009, partly because of changing shopper habits.

The offer values the company at as much as $8.84 billion.

Schulze already has 20.1 percent of the stock in the company, so paying for the rest of shares would mean coming up with about $6.9 billion.

Schulze resigned as chairman in May, after Dunn’s departure. A company investigation found that Schulze knew about the inappropriate relationship and failed to alert the board or human resources.

Schulze had been expected to stay on the board until the company’s annual shareholder meeting in June, but he resigned unexpectedly before the meeting and said he was exploring options for his hefty stake in the company.

Analysts had been expecting a possible bid since that announcement.

“Immediate and substantial changes are needed for the company to return to its market-leading ways,” Schulze said in a statement.

“It is my strong belief that Best Buy’s best chance for renewed success is to implement with urgency the necessary changes as a private company.”

Schulze’s offer would represent a 36 percent to 47 percent premium over the company’s Friday closing stock price.

Schulze said he would have preferred to pursue a deal privately but went public with the offer for the sake of speed.

“I am deeply concerned that further delay and indecision will cause additional loss of both value and talented leaders who are now uncertain of the company’s future,” Schulze said in a statement.

JOIN THE DISCUSSION | Register here

We welcome comments. Please keep them civil, short and to the point. ALL CAPS, spam, obscene, profane, abusive and off topic comments will be deleted. Repeat offenders will be blocked. Thanks for taking part — and abiding by these simple rules. A thorough explanation of rules of conduct can be found in our Terms of Service. If you have any questions, including why your comment may not be showing immediately after you submit it, be sure to visit the commenting FAQ.

Richard Schulze, Best Buy co-founder, said that he wants to take the electronics retailer private by buying up all of its shares he doesn’t already own in a deal that values the company at as much as $8.84 billion. (CHUCK STOODY/THE CANADIAN PRESS FILE, 2001)
CONTESTS

Similar stories

  • Best Buy founder gets more time

    Struggling Best Buy Co. has agreed to give founder and former chairman Richard Schulze more time to make a takeover bid for the electronics chain.

  • Best Buy stems tide of quarterly losses; no buyout bid

    Best Buy Co. lost less money in the fourth quarter as efforts by new CEO Hubert Joly to make the company more efficient showed glimmers of paying off.

  • Blackstone group offers to take Pactera private

    Private equity firm Blackstone Group LP, along with Pactera's CEO and other managers, have offered to take Pactera private in a deal that values the Chinese technology consulting and outsourcing firm at $680.4 million.

  • AP Source: Hansen adds backup offer to Kings sale

    If the NBA Board of Governors denies the pending sale and relocation of the Sacramento Kings, the Seattle group seeking to purchase the franchise has a backup deal with the Maloof family.

  • Will Hostess fade into history?

    Aging infrastructure. Balkanized union rules. Health food. Inefficient management. Crushing debt. Those ingredients formed much of the toxic recipe that pushed 82-year-old Hostess Brands Inc. into liquidation last month, ultimately shoving 18,500 workers onto the pavement.