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— Deals —
Facing increasing competition from Redbox and Netflix Inc., and struggling with its own debt problems, movie rental business Blockbuster Inc. (NYSE:BBI) is in defensive mode, doing all it can to conserve cash and maintain liquidity. 2009 Sept. 16: Struggling Blockbuster was previously aiming to shut 410 to 450 of its most unprofitable stores this year and next. A series of "accelerated closures" brings that target to 810 to 960. Aug. 28: Blockbuster sells Xtra-vision unit: Blockbuster Inc. has sold one of its international subsidiaries to Irish investors. The
Dallas movie and video game rental store chain announced Friday that it
sold its 186-store Xtra-vision Ltd. entertainment chain to Birchhall
Investments Ltd. for up to $45 million in cash. - Thomas Zadvydas May 28: Blockbuster announced that it was working to replace expiring
credit facilities, but did not plan to file for bankruptcy. It hired
Kirkland & Ellis to assist in its restructuring effort and capital
raising initiatives, said Blockbuster spokeswoman Karen Raskopf. May 15: Blockbuster: The horror movie: Movie rental business Blockbuster Inc.
(NYSE:BBI) is in defensive mode, doing all it can to conserve cash and
maintain liquidity. The company announced on Thursday its first-quarter
earnings of 19 cents per share as revenue came in lower than expected
at $1.1 billion from the same year-ago period. Blockbuster's main
concern is liquidity. To maintain liquidity, the Dallas-based company is implementing the following, according to its 10-Q filing:
2008 As expected, Blockbuster Inc. on July 1 abandoned its bid to acquire Circuit City Stores Inc., nearly three months after it put forth an offer worth up to $1.4 billion and a week after analysts largely agreed a deal between the two was unlikely. While
Circuit City shareholder Mark Wattles maintained June 24 there were
several interested bidders out there and news of a deal could come
within a month, several analysts, according to reports, believed it
wouldn't be with Blockbuster. Richmond, Va.-based Circuit City reported June 19 a wider quarterly loss than was expected and said it would suspend its future dividend. The company also said it filed a shelf registration statement with the Securities and Exchange Commission to shore up reserves and confirmed its strategic review was ongoing. Circuit City confirmed in May it hired Goldman Sachs & Co.
to explore its strategic options and the company opened its books to
Blockbuster and activist investor and Blockbuster's largest shareholder
Carl Icahn. Circuit City also said it had settled a proxy contest with
Wattles Capital Management to let the investor nominate a slate of
three directors. Meanwhile, shortly after the April 14 announcement, everyone had a take on it, including HBK Capital Management, an investor in both companies, which even suggested at the end of April it might help finance a deal. The Deal's Michael Rudnick pointed out April 14 the $6 to $8 per share offer, even with a nil-premium, could still put the squeeze on Blockbuster and its balance sheet with $185 million in cash at the end of its fourth quarter. The company indicated it would likely undertake a rights offering to pay for the deal, given the tight credit markets. Rudnick wrote:
Meanwhile:
Blockbuster, meanwhile, which for years has struggled with on-demand media offerings and upstart online DVD rental group Netflix Inc., lost $85.1 million in the year ended Jan. 6 and foresees net income between $5 million and $25 million for 2008, as it cuts back on advertising and grows its own online operations, Rudnick noted. Here's a look at the last several months:
THE ONLINE GAME Blockbuster clinched a key piece of that online business in August 2007. The Dallas-based movie rental giant said it would acquire movie download company Movielink LLC for undisclosed terms, but which the Wall Street Journal called less than $20 million -- five months after a source confirmed for The Deal's Richard Morgan that it was in the works. The deal counters (and, in a way, one-ups) a download service Netflix debuted in January 2007. As it continues to battle Netflix, Blockbuster unveiled expanded online subscription offerings in July. The Movielink deal marked the most recent acquisition for Blockbuster, as it tries to broaden its business beyond the in-store rental model. It didn't mark a shift in strategy, The Deal's David Shabelman pointed out, given Blockbuster's maneuvers to hammer Netflix by undercutting its prices. FEAR AND LOATHING In late July, the company reported a second quarter 2007 loss of $35.3 million, or 20 cents per share, down from a profit of $68.4 million, or 31 cents per share, a year earlier. According to a Reuters report, the numbers stem from a drop in in-store revenue and higher spending on online DVD rental, while the company planned to curb losses by restricting free in-store rentals and charging a $1.99 fee for additional rentals and offering the $1.99 in-store rental price to its mail subscribers, whose fees only cover online rental. Meanwhile, Netflix, brought suit against Blockbuster in April 2006 in an effort to shut down the retailer's then-18-month-old online store, alleging it knowingly infringed on Netflix's patents. In response, Blockbuster brought a counter-suit. The two settled in July. Historically dogged by the uber-popularity of Netflix, Blockbuster in November 2006 launched its Total Access program, which enables customers to rent online, return DVDs by mail or exchange them in-store for free rentals. Blockbuster has also, on occasion, overtly appealed to Netflix customers through its ability to circumvent its competitor's biggest obstacle -- reliance on the U.S. Postal System. Blockbuster has offered Netflix subscribers on occasion the opportunity to exchange their Netflix mail-delivery envelopes to Blockbuster and in exchange get free rentals. It now offers an in-store exchange service for Blockbuster's online video and game customers. The company, which Viacom wooed in 1994 for $8.4 billion in stock and spun off 10 years later, has recently braved issues over the years related to growth and competition. Icahn pushed for a sale of the company in 2005 and didn't get it, but won a board seat. Around the same time, the company withdrew its hostile, $929 million bid for Hollywood Video parent Hollywood Entertainment Corp., which paved the way for the target's agreed to $849 million sale to Movie Gallery. At the time, Icahn criticized chief executive John Antioco for enabling a competitor. The Hollywood deal, it turned out, would cripple Movie Gallery. The No.2 video rental chain after Blockbuster, filed for Chapter 11 in October and its plan to emerge was confirmed April 9. (For more, see a related Dealwatch.) DIRECTOR'S CUT Blockbuster has also been trimming its portfolio through mid-2007. Its slim-down has included:
Blockbuster has proved itself a force to be reckoned with and notably agile despite late online market entry. But is it now going back to its brick and mortar roots with a plan for Circuit City. And can it work?
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