Retail-focused Sycamore Partners is planning to cash in on its investment in Staples through a $1 billion dividend recap, according to Bloomberg, pushing the office supplies company's total debt to more than $5.3 billion, or about 4.7x adjusted EBITDA net of cash.
Sycamore will exit the company over the next year, with an initial public offering the most likely option. (oh, the poor fools who would choose to invest)
Adding debt before an exit could come with its own set of issues, as some PE-backed companies with substantial debt have struggled on or around the public markets. Apollo Global Management-backed ADT, which had more than $10 billion in debt when it went public in January 2018, has seen its stock price drop some 50% in the ensuing 14 months. Last week, Blackstone postponed a planned IPO for healthcare benefits manager Alight—with some analysts raising concerns over the business's long-term debt of $3.4 billion.
Looking back, dividend recaps have had varied effects on PE-backed retailers, with some going mostly unnoticed and others potentially contributing to an eventual bankruptcy. TPG Capital and Leonard Green & Partners executed a pair of dividend recaps that totaled more than $1.1 billion in the near decade they owned Petco, and they were then able to sell the business for a reported $2.7 billion profit to CVC Capital Partners and Canada Pension Plan Investment Board in 2016. To that end, CVC and Leonard Green acquired BJ's Wholesale for some $2.8 billion in 2011, then pulled out $1.8 billion before it raised around $650 million in a successful IPO last June. Both companies seem to have since fared well.
For others that went through dividend recaps, things ended quite poorly. A recent example came when Golden Gate Capital and Blum Capital bought discount retailer Payless through a leveraged buyout in 2012 and paid themselves more than $350 million in dividends. The company ultimately filed for bankruptcy in 2017, with Alden Global Capital taking majority control of operations while 400 stores closed. Still struggling to combat competition from online sales and too much debt, Payless subsequently posted -$63 million in EBITDA in 2018. Then this past February, the company filed for bankruptcy again, with creditors including Alden choosing to close the company's 2,500 North American locations as some 16,000 people lost their jobs.