Dillard's Inc. (NYSE: DDS) announced an agreement with many of its
dissident shareholders in a move designed to avoid an expensive proxy
contest. Activist hedge funds Barington Capital and the Clinton Group
agreed to forgo a proxy contest in exchange for the voluntary
nomination of four of its proposed directors. Additionally, the board
agreed to review whether the company's real estate assets and capital
are being optimally deployed to build shareholder value.
"We are
pleased to have reached an agreement with Barington and Clinton,"
Chairman and CEO William Dillard. "Both the Board and management
welcome the perspectives and insights of our proposed new directors.
The Class B board members are committed to working with the new Class A
board members to ensure that the best operating plan and management
team possible are in place."
Specifically, Dillard's agreed to
close under-performing stores in order to rationalize real estate as
soon as possible, cut unnecessary costs, and subject all future
commitments for new stores to strict return on capital requirements
that will be set by the board and management. These measures will help
the company improve its bottom-line by reducing unnecessary expenses
while ensuring that its assets are being monetized to drive
profitability.
The activists' nominees will be designated Class A
directors and have a term that will explore at the 2009 annual meeting.
Under the agreement, they will have all the same rights and abilities
and the original Class B directors while focusing on ways to implement
the activist agenda. This agenda consists of three tremendous
opportunities for improvement:
- Dillard’s $7.5 billion
revenue base offers significant margin leverage capable of producing
sizable cash flow gains from any future operating improvements. The
Company’s geographic concentration, especially in high-growth areas of
the Southeast and Southwest United States, offers unique regional
opportunities for its 331-store portfolio. Furthermore, the Dillard’s
brand name is well-regarded in the department store sector and the
Company has received above average scores in the area of customer
loyalty according to a recently released survey by Brand Keys. Clearly,
Dillard’s has the scale and brand recognition to be a successful
retailer.
- As Dillard’s trailing twelve month operating free
cash flow margin is 2.4% versus 7.7% for its department store peer
group, we believe that stockholders can realize enormous upside if
margins can be improved to the levels achieved by the Company’s peers.
We see a number of opportunities to immediately reduce the Company’s
cost base, including by improving sourcing, rationalizing SG&A
expenses and lowering capital expenditures. We also believe that there
are a host of initiatives in inventory management and merchandising
that can drive customer traffic and enhance margins. Among other
things, we believe that Dillard’s needs to tighten its current
assortment of offerings and vendors and consider a more regular
promotional cadence, as its stores, in our opinion, are
over-inventoried. In addition, we believe that Dillard’s needs to
embark upon an aggressive re-merchandising effort that features new
vendors (including exclusive offerings) and updated private label and
in-house collections to differentiate its value proposition for
customers. Furthermore, it is our belief that the Company needs to
enhance its brand marketing by adding more image and lifestyle
campaigns that communicate a revitalized message to the marketplace. We
are convinced that each of these initiatives would add excitement and
newness to the Dillard’s shopping experience and attract customers to
its stores.
- Dillard’s owns approximately 75% of its store
portfolio, comprised of approximately 42 million square feet of retail
real estate. Currently, the Company’s shares trade at only 0.5x its
tangible book value of approximately $32.50 per share. This represents
a significant discount to the Company’s peer group, which trades at an
average tangible book value multiple of approximately 2.0x. We also
believe that Dillard’s tangible book value is understated, since the
current market value of the Company’s owned real estate far exceeds its
depreciated book value. In fact, in a November 26, 2007 research
report, Deutsche Bank estimated Dillard’s net asset value before taxes
to be $59 per share. Deutsche Bank also notes that “actions taken to
unlock the Company’s real estate value would be positive for the
shares, as the NAV [net asset value] for Dillard’s [is] greater than
the value based solely on operating fundamentals.” It is our belief
that there are a number of measures that the Company can take to
enhance the value of its real estate portfolio, including converting
certain properties to higher and better use, closing underperforming
stores and engaging in sale/leaseback transactions.
These
proposals have a lot of merit and would unlock substantial value if
implemented. The fact that the activist investors will now hold seats
on the board of directors significantly increases the likelihood of
change. This makes DDS a stock worth watching closely over the next few
months.
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