It's nothing to these banks. They either write it off, or if by some miracle people start returning and sales go up, they get back a high return on investment. They're likely looking at what's their maximum they can write off in loses. The way this company is being run, you can't cut your way to profitability, as proven nearly this entire decade by Sears Holdings! They last turned a profit in 2010, and what have they also done since 2010? Cut stores! They should have filed bankruptcy closer to 2013, they'd have a better chance than they do now! Now, they've got no assets worth anything! Then, they had much more valuable real estate. They could have made a killing if they had shutdown the company in 2008 and sold all that land before the Great Recession, because business was booming, e-commerce hadn't grown beyond a niche market. Of course he held onto them far too long now, and they continue to be in the red for what is easily going to be another year. When they finally run out of properties entirely by the end of 2019, you can officially call them done.