Business & Tech

Toys R' Us Could Sell Or Close Remaining HV Stores: Report

A CNBC report, however, provided a slightly different take on the matter. The retailer with several HV locations has been struggling.

Toys R' Us could sell or close its 880 U.S. retail stores – a move that could jeopardize the jobs of 33,000 people, according to three reports published on Wednesday. Toys R' Us has 15 locations and 14 Babies R' Us stores in New York state, including 12 in the Hudson Valley.

The Washington Post and The Wall Street Journal said the toy retailer could be winding down its operations six months after it filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection in federal court. The Record reported that the company plans to file liquidation papers Wednesday night in advance of a court hearing scheduled for Thursday afternoon.

The company confirmed the reports that Chief Executive Dave Brandon had shared the despairing news with employees in a conference call, according to The Record. Brandon told employees it was a sad day and that customers and others would be sad to see the brand disappear, a spokeswoman for Toys R Us told The Record. (For more information on this and other neighborhood stories, subscribe to Patch to receive daily newsletters and breaking news alerts.)

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Last month, Toys R' Us announced that it would close 20 percent of the store's locations.

The news tonight means that the future of all of the Toys R' Us and Babies R' Us locations appears in jeopardy.

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A CNBC report, however, provided a slightly different take on the matter. Toys R Us is studying one proposal that could keep the business alive and keep open roughly 200 U.S. stores open after the retailer liquidates, according to the CNBC report on Wednesday.

The Record also reported that the decision to liquidate the company may not mean the end of the toy retailer if a buyer surfaces who wants to purchase some of the stores and operate them as an ongoing, smaller version of the business.

Weak holiday sales are to blame for the New Jersey-based chain's demise, according to the Post's article and a CNBC report.

The company announced last month that it was closing about 180 U.S. stores. The chain has 880 stores in the U.S. and 1,600 worldwide. It has offered 10 to 30 percent off sales at those stores.

New York has 15 Toys "R" Us stores. Locations in Yonkers and Kingston were among the roughly 20 percent of the chain's locations to be shuttered under that plan. In the Hudson Valley there are also Toys "R" Us stores in Poughkeepsie, Jefferson Valley, Central Valley, Middletown, Nanuet and White Plains. There are Babies "R" Us locations in Jefferson Valley, Nanuet, White Plains and Yonkers among the 14 Babies "R" Us stores in New York.

Toys R Us is in the process of drafting a court motion for its liquidation plan, CNBC reported, and could file it as early as Wednesday.

According to CNBC, if Toys R Us shut down completely, it would be "a blow to the toy industry," accounted for 15 to 20 percent of U.S. toy sales last year.

Just days ago, Toys R Us announced this on Twitter: "To our loyal customers: We've seen an amazing outpouring of love and support in recent days and we truly appreciate it. Our stores are open for business, ready to bring joy to children wherever we can, and to help new and expecting parents navigate raising a family."

The bankruptcy filing came amid slumping sales and mounting debt, which grew to about $5 billion, although Toys R Us announced at the time that the "vast majority" of its 1,600 worldwide locations were profitable.

The once-dominant retailer struggled to compete with online retail giant Amazon and stores like Walmart, The New York Times reported.

Toys R Us had a $400 million debt payment due this year and was "burning through cash," the Times reported, and hired law firm Kirkland & Ellis to devise a strategy moving forward.

A federal bankruptcy judge ruled late last year that Toys R Us may pay 17 executives about $14 million in incentive bonuses if it hits a certain earnings amount. Attorneys representing the company argued that the bonuses would help executives focus on increasing sales during the past holiday season.

Toys R Us received a commitment of more than $3 billion of debt financing from lenders, including JP Morgan Chase and some of its existing lenders, the company announced. This money is expected to "immediately improve" Toys R Us's financial health, the company announced.

Last year was a disaster for brick-and-mortar retailers that announced plans to close more than 7,000 stores — a whopping 224 percent increase in announced store closures compared to 2016. Chains that already have confirmed they will be shuttering locations in 2018 include Bon-Ton, Gap, Sears-Kmart, Tevana and Walgreens.

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