This is Why No One Should Bail Out the ‘Smart Money’ Stuck in Brick-and-Mortar Retailers: Let them Shed their Own Tears

The toxic Safeway-Albertsons combo is waiting in the wings. Late yesterday, Fairway Group Holdings, parent of Fairway Market – an ‘iconic New York food retailer,’ as it calls itself, that had started out as a ‘veggie stand’ in 1933 and now lists 18 stores on its website – crumpled under a pile of debt and filed for a prepackaged Chapter 11 bankruptcy. Almost exactly three years after its IPO!
Bankruptcy rumors have been swirling for a while. The company announced in February that it would need to raise capital in order to keep its doors open. April 15, Bloomberg reported that the company was negotiating a debt restructuring with its creditors, and that a deal was near for a prepackaged Chapter 11 filing.
When the company did file yesterday, it stated that it wanted to ‘eliminate’ $140 million senior secured debt. In return, these creditors would get common equity and $84 million of new debt of the reorganized company.
All of the currently outstanding shares will be cancelled. Screw those who’d bought them. They should have known better. That was the message.

This post was published at Wolf Street on May 3, 2016.