Borders-bankrupt

The number two bookstore chain in the United States is calling it quits: Borders will be shutting down all remaining stores and liquidating all assets.

Five months after filing for bankruptcy protection, the U.S.’s second-largest bookseller Borders will be liquidating its assets, closing all its stores, and letting go of its employees after the company was unable to reach a buyout deal with Book-of-the-Month Club owner Nafaji Cos. Instead, Borders’ assets will be sold to a group of liquidators led by Hilco and Gordon Brothers.

“We are saddened by this development,” said Borders Group President Mike Edwards, in a statement. “We were all working hard towards a different outcome, but the headwinds we have been facing for quite some time, including the rapidly changing book industry, ereader revolution, and turbulent economy, have brought us to where we are now.”

Borders currently operates almost 400 stores and employes nearly 11,000 people. All of the company’s retail locations will be liquidated—with court approval, that process could start in some locations as soon as July 22—with all locations going into liquidation by the end of September.

Borders filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection back in February; as part of the process, the company closed roughly 30 percent of its most-underperforming retail locations and has secured some $500 million in financing to see it through recovery. Borders had put itself up for auction, hoping to attract a white knight that would invest in the company and bring it out of bankruptcy. However, despite ongoing negotiations with Nafaji, the companies were unable to come to an agreement and the auction period ended with no one making any bids for the company. As such, Borders has little choice but to submit to the bankruptcy court an offer from Hilco and Gordon to purchase the store assets for liquidation.

Industry reports indicate the competitor Barnes & Noble might be interested in picking up selected Borders locations, and the U.S.’s third-largest book retailer—Books-A-Million apparently indicated it might be interested in a subset of Borders’ remaining retail locations. However, neither company will confirm Books-A-Million’s interest, and despite the apparent success of its Android-based Nook ereader ecosystem, Barnes & Noble has its own financial difficulties: it’s currently mulling a $1 billion offer from Liberty Media for 70 percent of the company.

Although several factors no doubt contributed to Borders’ collapse—and many were recently outlined by former Borders exec Mark Evans most industry watchers cite increasingly cut-throat competition with the likes of Barnes & Noble and Amazon.com, as well as apparently being caught flat-footed by the digital media revolution.

“Everyone at Borders has helped millions of people discover new books, music, and movies, and we all take pride in the role Borders has played in our customers’ lives,” Edwards noted in his statement.. “I extend a heartfelt thanks to all of our dedicated employees and our loyal customers.”

Showing 10 comments

  1. jstein311 at 9:28am 19th July 2011 if anyone wants to know why Borders REALLY went bankrupt, read this: //blog.barkerdzp.com/borders-books-chapter-11-the-untold-story-beh
  2. John Griffin at 1:50am 19th July 2011 :(
  3. Daniel Pizarro at 1:28am 19th July 2011 A great company destroyed by greedy corporate management ...
  4. Lorne Hammond at 1:16am 19th July 2011 Buy an e-reader of choice.. it saves forests, theres no air conditioning ruining the atmosphere for storage, theres no emissions from trucking books across the country, theres no toxic chemicals being used for pulp/paper/inks and glues. While its sad that yet another 11k people are out of work, its a wave of change that can't really be stopped because it simply makes more sense than the old way.
  5. Kimberly Swartz George at 1:14am 19th July 2011 flailing in agony. My blockbuster closed this week too and it feels, well, just sad.
  6. L Gerardo Conelly at 1:09am 19th July 2011 This is a sad day... I really liked Borders way better than B&N... I guess we will have to turn to online and cherish our current books, since soon enough we won't have any physical book at our hands
  7. Craig DeLarge at 1:02am 19th July 2011 Sad day.
  8. Michael Hookano at 1:02am 19th July 2011 bill gates predicted this back in the 90's. the closing of brick and mortar's and the need to be on the net.
  9. Ian Bell at 5:50pm 18th July 2011 So what the heck did they do with that $500 million financing? Did they pay off some of the debt they owed, or did the execs take the money and run? Super sad. They should have invested heavily in books and online, and not music CDs...
    1. Dan Gaul at 9:29am 19th July 2011 I loved Borders for books. I agree: having a huge section devoted to movies and music was a horrible idea. You rarely ever saw anyone browsing in those sections.
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