a
Q4 & Full Year 2014 Transformation Update & Financial Results
February 2015
2
Agenda
Introduction Rob Schriesheim Chief Financial Officer
Opening Remarks Eddie Lampert Chairman & Chief Executive Officer
Financial Results Rob Schriesheim
Progress on Our Transformation Eddie Lampert
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Cautionary Statement
Regarding Forward-Looking Information This presentation contains forward-looking statements, including statements about our transformation through our integrated retail strategy, the opportunities, some of which are quantified, presented by a framework for profit, our plans to redeploy and reconfigure our assets, our liquidity and ability to exercise financial flexibility as we meet our obligations and possible strategic transactions. Forward-looking statements, including these, are based on the current beliefs and expectations of our management and are subject to significant risks, assumptions and uncertainties that may cause our actual results, performance or achievements to be materially different from any future results, performance or achievements expressed or implied by these forward-looking statements. In addition, the framework for profit is not intended to provide guidance or predict results; instead, it is intended to provide dimensional context for the potential opportunities for increasing profitability if we are successful in achieving the potential results outlined, which is subject to significant assumptions, uncertainties and risks, including those identified in the presentation relating to maintaining, reversing or otherwise improving or achieving certain performance metrics, including member penetration, level of member engagement and retention rates. There can be no assurance that any of these efforts will be successful. The statements concerning our evaluation of strategic alternatives, including with respect to the sale-leaseback/real estate investment trust transaction regarding certain owned real estate, also are subject to risks and uncertainties, including our ability to enter into or complete any such transaction on acceptable terms, on intended timetables or at all, the form or terms and conditions of any such transaction, and the impact of the evaluation and/or completion of any such transaction on our other businesses. There can be no assurance that any of these efforts will be successful. The following additional factors, among others, could cause actual results to differ from those set forth in the forward-looking statements: our ability to offer merchandise and services that our customers want, including our proprietary brand products; our ability to successfully implement our integrated retail strategy to transform our business; our ability to successfully manage our inventory levels; initiatives to improve our liquidity through inventory management and other actions; competitive conditions in the retail and related services industries; worldwide economic conditions and business uncertainty, including the availability of consumer and commercial credit, changes in consumer confidence and spending, the impact of rising fuel prices, and changes in vendor relationships; vendors’ lack of willingness to provide acceptable payment terms or otherwise restricting financing to purchase inventory or services; possible limits on our access to our domestic credit facility, which is subject to a borrowing base limitation and a springing fixed charge coverage ratio covenant, capital markets and other financing sources, including additional second lien financings, with respect to which we do not have commitments from lenders; our ability to successfully achieve our plans to generate liquidity through potential transactions or otherwise; potential liabilities in connection with the separation of Lands’ End, Inc. and disposition of a portion of our ownership interest in Sears Canada Inc.; our extensive reliance on computer systems, including legacy systems, to implement our integrated retail strategy, process transactions, summarize results, maintain customer, member, associate and Company data, and otherwise manage our business, which may be subject to disruptions or security breaches; the impact of seasonal buying patterns, including seasonal fluctuations due to weather conditions, which are difficult to forecast with certainty; our dependence on sources outside the United States for significant amounts of our merchandise; our reliance on third parties to provide us with services in connection with the administration of certain aspects of our business and the transfer of significant internal historical knowledge to such parties; impairment charges for goodwill and intangible assets or fixed-asset impairment for long-lived assets; our ability to attract, motivate and retain key executives and other associates; our ability to protect or preserve the image of our brands; the outcome of pending and/or future legal proceedings, including product liability and qui tam claims and proceedings with respect to which the parties have reached a preliminary settlement; and the timing and amount of required pension plan funding. While we believe that our forecasts and assumptions are reasonable, we caution that actual results may differ materially. We intend the forward-looking statements to speak only as of the time made and do not undertake to update or revise them as more information becomes available, except as required by law.
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Non-GAAP Financial Measures
For purposes of evaluating operating performance, we use an Adjusted Earnings Before Interest, Taxes, Depreciation and Amortization ("Adjusted EBITDA") measurement. Adjusted EBITDA is computed as net loss attributable to Sears Holdings Corporation appearing on the statements of operations excluding (income) loss attributable to noncontrolling interests, income tax (expense) benefit, interest expense, interest and investment income (loss), other income, depreciation and amortization and gain on sales of assets. In addition, it is adjusted to exclude certain significant items as set forth below. Our management uses Adjusted EBITDA to evaluate the operating performance of our businesses, as well as executive compensation metrics, for comparable periods. Adjusted EBITDA should not be used by investors or other third parties as the sole basis for formulating investment decisions as it excludes a number of important cash and non-cash recurring items. While Adjusted EBITDA and Domestic Adjusted EBITDA are non-GAAP measurements, management believes that they are an important indicator of ongoing operating performance and useful to investors because:
• Adjusted EBITDA and Domestic Adjusted EBITDA excludes the effects of financing and investing activities by eliminating the effects of interest and depreciation costs;
• Management considers gains/(losses) on the sale of assets to result from investing decisions rather than ongoing operations; and
• Other significant items, while periodically affecting our results, may vary significantly from period to period and have a disproportionate effect in a given period, which affects the comparability of results, including impairment charges related to fixed assets and intangible assets, closed store and severance charges, domestic pension expense, expenses associated with legal matters, transaction costs associated with strategic initiatives and other expenses, the Lands’ End separation and the Sears Canada deconsolidation. We have adjusted our results for these items to make our statements more comparable and therefore more useful to investors as the items are not representative of our ongoing operations and reflect past investment decisions.
See appendix for reconciliations of the differences between the non-GAAP financial measures used in this presentation with the most comparable financial measures calculated in accordance with GAAP.
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Opening Remarks
Enhancing Our Financial Flexibility
3
Focusing on the Future: Best Members, Best Stores, Best Categories
2
Restoring Profitability: $217M Year-Over-Year Improvement in Q4 Domestic Adjusted EBITDA
1
6
Financial Results
7
Domestic Adjusted EBITDA Results
Meaningful Improvement in Year-Over-Year Domestic Adjusted EBITDA Trend
($ in millions) Q1 Q2 Q3 Q4 Full Year
2013 $(15) $(73) $(310) $(92) $(490)
2014 $(178) $(298) $(296) $125 $(647)
YoY Change $(163) $(225) $14 $217 $(157)
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Fourth Quarter
Year-Over-Year Revenue Changes
Q4 2013As Reported
Sears Canada Lands' End ClosedStores
Q4 2013Comp Basis
Comp StoreSales
Other Q4 2014As Reported
Amou
nt in
mill
ions
$10,593
($530)
($57)
$8,099
($313)
($1,097)
($497)
See slide 27 in appendix for year-to-date analysis
On a comparable basis, revenue declined 4.4%
$8,469
85% of Revenue Decline was Due to Non-Comp Items Related to Asset Reconfiguration Activity
(1) Other represents revenue from ongoing business operations not directly associated with a store. This includes items such as Home Services revenue, as well as revenue from our ongoing relationships with Sears Hometown and Outlet Stores, Inc. and Lands’ End.
1
9
Fourth Quarter
Comparable Store Sales
Format Q4 2014 Drivers
Sears Domestic -7.0%
Mattresses
Home Appliances
Apparel
Auto
Consumer Electronics
Kmart -2.0%
Apparel
Toys
Jewelry
Seasonal
Grocery & Household
Consumer Electronics
Total Domestic -4.4%
See slide 28 in appendix for year-to-date analysis
Excluding the impact of consumer electronics, Sears Domestic comp store sales
would have been -4.6%
While comparable sales were down, gross margin on a comparable basis was up
Excluding the impact of consumer electronics and
grocery & household, Kmart comp store sales would have
been +2.8%
Excluding the impact of consumer electronics and
grocery & household, Total SHC Domestic comp store sales
would have been -1.1%
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Q4 2013As Reported
Sears Canada Lands' End Closed StoreImpact
Other Q4 2013Comp Basis
Volume Rate Q4 2014As Reported
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Fourth Quarter
Year-Over-Year Gross Margin Changes Am
ount
in m
illio
ns
$2,482
($208)
($83)
($292)
$154 $1,978 $18
See slide 29 in appendix for year-to-date analysis
($93)
(1) Consists of non-cash reserves
$1,907
On a Comparable Basis, Margin Increased $71M or 3.7%
All of the Margin Decline was Due to Non-Comp Items Related to Asset Reconfiguration Activity
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Fourth Quarter
Year-Over-Year Expense Changes A
mou
nt in
mill
ions
Q4 2013As Reported
Sears Canada Lands' End Non-Operating Q4 2013Comp Basis
SG&A Q4 2014As Reported
Expense Increase Expense Decrease
1 2
$2,613
($128)
($319)
($239)
$2,002
See slide 30 in appendix for year-to-date analysis
$75
(1) Consists of closed store reserves, domestic pension expense, legal expenses, transaction costs and other expenses. (2) Domestic adjusted selling and administrative expense.
On a Comparable Basis, We Reduced Expenses by $239M
$372M of the Expense Reduction was Due to Non-Comp Items Related to Asset Reconfiguration Activity
$2,241
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FYE 2014
Cash 250$
Availability on Credit Facility1 808
Committed Liquid Availability 1,058$
Uncommitted Incremental Short-term Borrowing Capacity 97
Total Liquid Availability 1,155$
Equity in Inventory 3,322
Total 4,477$
Amounts in millions
Financial Position & Liquid Assets
We Believe We Have Sufficient Financial Resources And Liquid Assets
(1) Reflects effect of springing fixed charge coverage ratio covenant and borrowing base requirement. (2) Availability to borrow subject to the springing fixed charge coverage ratio covenant and borrowing base requirement. (3) The amount of permitted second lien debt will vary throughout the year depending on our inventory and associated borrowing base.
$3.275B revolving credit facility2 through April 2016 secured by domestic inventory and credit card receivables Permitted to raise up to $500M of short-term debt maturing before April 2016, $403M outstanding at the end of Q4 Permitted to raise up to a maximum of $760M in additional 2nd lien debt, subject to borrowing base requirements3
SHC Domestic Credit Facility
Substantial portfolio of unencumbered real estate including approximately 685 owned and 1,050 leased locations There are numerous transactions that we believe we could take advantage of to provide additional liquidity
SHC Real Estate Portfolio
After the completion of the rights offering on November 7, 2014, we continue to retain ownership of approximately 12M common shares of Sears Canada, with a market value of approximately $120M as of February 24, 2015
SHC Investment in Sears Canada
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$1,491 $1,491 $2,259
$3,626 $3,550
$3,550
FYE 2013Adjusted Net Debt
Change inLong Term
Debt
Change inNet Short Term
Debt
FYE 2014Adj. Net Debt Excl.Change in Pension
Change inUnfunded Pension
Obligation
FYE 2014Adjusted Net Debt
Unfunded Pension Obligation Increase Decrease Net Debt
Increase in Unfunded Pension Obligation Driven By:
• 90 bps Drop in Interest Rates as Required by GAAP2
• New Society of Actuaries Mortality Tables
De-risking the Balance Sheet
Domestic Adjusted Net Debt Position1
$5,117
$5,809
Amou
nts
in m
illio
ns
(1) Defined as total net debt plus unfunded pension obligation. (2) GAAP interest rate required to be used in measuring funding levels.
$314 $768
($390)
Total Net Debt ($76)
$5,041
Excluding Unfunded Pension, Total Net Debt Decreased by $76M Year-Over-Year
Note that FY15 pension contribution will decline to $275 million versus $417 million in FY14
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Lands’ End Spin-Off $500M in proceeds
Fiscal 2014
Asset Reconfiguration & Financing Activity
Generated $2.3B of liquidity from asset reconfiguration and financing activities in fiscal 2014
Short-term Loan Secured by Certain Real Properties $400M in proceeds Initial maturity date of Dec 31, 2014. Extended to Feb 28, 2015.
Rights Offering for 40M Common Shares in Sears Canada $380M in proceeds from oversubscribed offering
Rights Offering for Senior Unsecured Notes with Warrants $625M in proceeds from oversubscribed offering
Domestic Real Estate Transactions $358M in proceeds
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Actively Exploring Sale-Leaseback to Newly Formed REIT 1,2
Actively exploring monetization of a portion of our owned real estate portfolio through a sale-leaseback transaction, with the selected stores to be sold to a newly-formed REIT
SHC would continue to operate in the store locations sold to the REIT under one or more master leases
Targeting between 200 and 300 Sears and Kmart stores to be sold to the REIT
Projected to close in the first half of calendar year 20153
Expected to result in an excess of $2 billion in cash proceeds, substantially enhancing SHC’s financial flexibility
The REIT itself would be funded by equity and debt: Equity would be raised through a rights offering with subscription rights distributed pro rata to all stockholders of
record, providing every stockholder the right to participate proportionate to their ownership interest
Debt would be raised from mortgage or other debt financing
Amended and Extended Secured Short-term Loan SHC will repay $200M of the $400M loan on March 2nd
Lenders have agreed to release 50% of the value of the collateral in connection with repayment
Extended remaining $200M until the earlier of June 1, 2015 or the potential REIT closing
Lenders have committed to re-lend up to $200M, at SHC’s election, on or prior to June 1, 2015
If we re-borrow, we must re-pledge the released collateral
Fiscal 2015
Asset Reconfiguration & Financing Activity
(1) There can be no assurance that any transactions will be entered into or completed on acceptable terms, or at all. (2) There can be no assurance that we will pursue such a transaction, and any transaction would require review and approval by our board of directors. (3) Subject to, among other things, board approvals and market conditions.
As we transform our business in 2015, we intend to proactively right-size, redeploy and highlight the value of our assets, including our substantial real estate portfolio
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Progress On Our Transformation
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Our Transformation Is Underway
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Our Best Members
• Increasing Engagement
• Strengthening Relationships
• Growth Through Retention
Our Best Stores
• Optimizing Store Network
• Integrated Retail Investments
• Continues Productivity Improvement
Our Best Categories
• Focus on Leading Categories
• Transforming Important But Underperforming Categories
Focused on the Future
As we transform our business we are focused on three areas:
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Focused on Our Best Members
Building Relationships Through Personalization
Over 25% of our Marketing Communications are Personalized
Q4 2013 Q4 2014
Mass vs. Personalized Interactions
Personalized Traditional
Benefits of Personalized Interactions
Increased Relevance
Increased Engagement
Higher Retention
Increased Visit Frequency
Larger Share of Member’s Wallet
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Focused on Our Best Members
Connecting Online and Stores
Store to Home In store Kiosks in all of our Sears and Kmart stores allow
associates to fulfill members’ needs Access to over 120 million products when a member can’t find
what they are looking for
60% of Online Transactions are now Multi Channel
Ship From Store Leverages our inventory assets across the country Enables us to ship to 99% of U.S. zip codes in 2 days or less by
having our stores ship product when closer to a member’s home than a warehouse During Holiday 2014, we saw close to one third of all online
shipments fulfilled by our stores
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Focused on Our Best Stores
Optimizing Store Network and Space
We are transforming our asset base to better serve our members
In many cases, our stores are larger than needed for today’s technology equipped consumer
Partnering with other retailers allows us to improve productivity and profitability by: Rationalizing our retail store footprint Generating substantial leasing income
On October 20, 2014, we announced lease agreements with Primark, a leading fashion retailer in Europe Primark will lease 7 locations from SHC
in conjunction with their entry into the Northeastern United States
Sears will continue have a significant presence in 6 locations with a streamlined store format of up to 100,000 selling square feet
Sears & Whole Foods on Shared Footprint in Clearwater, Florida
As we leverage Shop Your Way and Integrated Retail, we will continue to right-size, redeploy and highlight the value of our assets, including our substantial real estate portfolio
Sears & Forever 21 on Shared Footprint in Costa Mesa, California
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• Launched in-vehicle pick-up in 2014 • Expanded offering to include in-vehicle returns & exchanges • Enabled cross format free store pick-up expanding our reach
In-Store Pick-Ups & Returns
Focused on Our Best Stores
Integrated Retail Investments
Focusing Our Resources on Our Best Stores as We Invest in Integrated Retail
• Replaced more than 100,000 paper signs in 300 Sears stores • Strategically rolling out to more of our best stores in 2015 • Signs display pricing, product information, and consumer reviews
Digital Signs
• Currently in over 500 Sears stores • Provides instant access to information on millions of products • Associates can complete checkout or send shopper recap from device
Associate Mobility
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• Bringing product design in-house to elevate style and quality • Reducing lead times to improve in-season responsiveness • Improving processes geared towards better SKU rationalization
Apparel
Focused on Our Best Categories
Leading Categories
Focused on Growing Our Best & Most Important Categories
• Reinforcing our position as #1 national service provider • Focused on improving service levels and response times • Investing in people, processes and technology to grow the business
Home Services
• Reinforcing our position as #1 appliance retailer in the U.S. • Launching innovative products with exclusive features under Kenmore • Expanding assortment both in-store and online
Home Appliances
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Focused on Our Best Categories
Transforming Consumer Electronics Business Model
• Building new scan-based trading relationships to expand our assortment while mitigating risk
Scan-Based Trading
• Vendor-funded experiences featuring key brands
• Re-merchandising to maximize exposure and presence of our most relevant brands
Store-In-Store
• New categories and new brands through vendor partners
• Dedicated in-store presence for expanded Marketplace offerings
Marketplace
Focused On Building Partnerships To Increase Margin & Mitigate Risk
New model may impact revenue performance; however, we believe it will improve profitability, reduce working capital and provide our members more of the products they are looking for
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Summary
Increasing Our Financial Flexibility
3
Restoring Profitability: $217M Year-Over-Year Improvement in Q4 Domestic Adjusted EBITDA
1
Focusing on the Future: Best Members, Best Stores, Best Categories Focusing on the Future: Best Members, Best Stores, Best Categories
2
a
Appendix
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Full Year 2014
Year-Over-Year Revenue Changes
FY 2013 Sears Canada Lands' End Closed Stores FY 2013 CompBasis
Comp StoreSales
Other FY 2014
Amou
nts
in m
illio
ns
$36,188
($1,341)
($241) $31,198
($421)
($1,708)
($1,279)
(1)
On a comparable basis, revenue declined 2.1%
87% of Revenue Decline was Due to Non-Comp Items Related to Asset Reconfiguration Activity
$31,860
(1) Other represents revenue from ongoing business operations not directly associated with a store. This includes items such as Home Services revenue, as well as revenue from our ongoing relationships with Sears Hometown and Outlet Stores, Inc. and Lands’ End.
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Full Year 2014
Domestic Comparable Store Sales
Format Full Year 2014 Drivers
Sears Domestic -2.1%
Home Appliances
Mattresses
Apparel
Auto
Consumer Electronics
Kmart -1.4%
Apparel
Jewelry
Grocery & Household
Consumer Electronics
Total Domestic -1.8%
Excluding the impact of consumer electronics, Sears Domestic comp store sales
would have been -0.5%
Excluding the impact of consumer electronics and
grocery & household, Total SHC Domestic comp store sales
would have been +0.1%
Excluding the impact of consumer electronics and
grocery & household, Kmart comp store sales would have
been +0.8%
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FY 2013 Sears Canada Lands' End Closed StoreImpact
Other FY 2013 CompBasis
Volume Rate FY 20141
Full Year 2014
Year-Over-Year Margin Changes
Amount in millions
$8,755
($529)
($155)
($514)
($155) $7,149 ($11) ($242)
(1) Consists of non-cash reserves
$7,459
On a comparable basis, Margin declined 4.2%
81% of Margin Decline was Due to Non-Comp Items Related to Asset Reconfiguration Activity
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Full Year 2014
Year-Over-Year Expense Changes Am
ount
in m
illio
ns
FY 2013 Sears Canada Lands' End Non-Operating FY 2013 CompBasis
SG&A FY 2014
Expense Increase Expense Decrease
1 2
$9,384
($389)
($482)
($394)
$8,220
$101
(1) Consists of closed store reserves, domestic pension expense, legal expenses, transaction costs and other expenses. (2) Domestic adjusted selling and administrative expense
$8,614
On a Comparable Basis, We Reduced Expenses by $394M
$770M of the Expense Reduction was Due to Non-Comp Items Related to Asset Reconfiguration Activity
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Legacy Pension Obligation History
Sears Holdings has a frozen pension plan which provides benefits for past services
The pension obligation increased in 2014 due to a decrease in the discount rate and new mortality rates used to compute the liability
Note: A 100 bps increase in the discount rate would reduce the pension liability by approximately $600 million
2014 2013 2012 2011 2010 2009
Assets $3,616 $3,490 $3,221 $4,051 $4,054 $3,633 Liability 5,875 4,981 5,311 6,109 5,623 5,435Unfunded ($2,259) ($1,491) ($2,090) ($2,058) ($1,569) ($1,802)
Discount Rate 3.70% 4.60% 4.25% 4.90% 5.75% 6.00%
Amounts in millions Year-End Balances(1)
Continue To Honor Our Legacy Pension Obligations While De-Risking This Liability
(1) In 2012, the Company offered a voluntary lump sum to certain plan participants and paid $1.5 billion in settlements thereby reducing pension risk.
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Domestic Pension Contributions
$352
$516
$360 $417
$275 $284 $282 $267 $208
2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019
Actual Contributions Estimated Contributions
$ in
mill
ions
$1.6 Billion
(1) In order to reduce the risks of gross pension obligations, the Company elected to contribute an additional $203M to the domestic pension plan in fiscal 2012, which is included in the amount shown.
(2) The Company offered a voluntary lump sum to certain plan participants and paid $1.5 billion in settlements thereby reducing pension risk. (3) Projected contributions include provision for future strengthening of the mortality tables by the IRS.
1
2
$1.3 Billion3
Historically, Pension Contributions Have Been A Significant Use of Our Cash
We Expect Contributions To Decline After 2014, Providing Relief From Funding Pressure Created By Artificially Low Interest Rates
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De-risking Our Obligations
Consistently Reduced Lessee Obligation
$6,617 $6,259
$5,514 $5,060
$4,729 $4,343
$3,646
$2,885
2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014
$883 $864 $864 $813 $826 $794 $721 Annual Rent
Expense
Amounts in millions
Reducing Net Minimum Lease Payments Decreases Corporate Obligations And Further De-Risks Our Business Model
As We Continue To Adjust Our Store Footprint We Expect To Further Reduce Lease Obligations
$677
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Sears Holdings Consolidated Results
Amounts in millions, except per share amounts
2014 2013 2014 2013Revenues $ 8,099 $ 10,593 $ 31,198 $ 36,188
Net loss attributable to Holdings' shareholders $ (159) $ (358) $ (1,682) $ (1,365)
EPS $ (1.50) $ (3.37) $ (15.82) $ (12.87)
Adjusted net loss (1) $ (36) $ (171) $ (830) $ (792)
Adjusted EPS (1) $ (0.34) $ (1.61) $ (7.81) $ (7.46)
Fourth Quarter Full Year
(1) Adjusted for the results of the Lands' End business and Sears Canada which were included in our results prior to the separation/disposition.
35
Significant Items
Amounts in millions
2014 2013 2014 2013Net loss as reported $ (159) $ (358) $ (1,682) $ (1,365)
Domestic pension expense 14 25 56 102
Domestic closed store/store impairments/ severance 78 166 158 180
Domestic gain on sales of assets (14) (7) (54) (41)
Other(1) 26 — 29 —
Gain on Sears Canada disposition — — (44) —
Domestic tax matters 19 249 574 655
Sears Canada segment — (200) 137 (244)
Lands' End separation — (46) (4) (79)
Adjusted net loss (2) (36)$ (171)$ (830)$ (792)$
(1) Includes expenses associated with legal matters, transaction costs related to strategic initiatives and other expenses.(2) Adjusted for the results of the Lands' End and Sears Canada businesses which were included in our results prior to the separation/disposition.
Fourth Quarter Full Year
36
Consolidated Adjusted EBITDA
Amounts in millions
2014 2013 2014 2013Net loss attributable to SHC per statement of operations $ (159) $ (358) $ (1,682) $ (1,365)Income (loss) attributable to noncontrolling interests — 208 (128) 249 Income tax expense (benefit) (63) 125 125 144 Interest expense 92 73 313 254 Interest and investment (income) loss 1 (178) (132) (207)Other income — (2) (4) (2) Operating loss (129) (132) (1,508) (927)Depreciation and amortization 126 173 581 732 Gain on sales of assets (59) (391) (207) (667)Before excluded items (62) (350) (1,134) (862)
Closed store reserve and severance 86 103 224 130 Domestic pension expense 22 40 89 162
Other(1) 41 — 50 —Impairment charges 38 219 63 233 Adjusted EBITDA 125 12 (708) (337)
Lands' End separation — (80) (10) (150)Adjusted EBITDA as defined(2) $ 125 $ (68) $ (718) $ (487)
Sears Canada segment — (24) 71 (3)Domestic Adjusted EBITDA as defined (2) $ 125 $ (92) $ (647) $ (490)
(1) Includes expenses associated with legal matters, transaction costs related to strategic initiatives and other expenses.(2) Adjusted for the results of the Lands' End and Sears Canada businesses which were included in our results prior to the separation/disposition.
Fourth Quarter Full Year
37
Adjusted EBITDA
Amounts in millions
2014 2013 2014 2013Revenues $ 8,099 $ 10,062 $ 30,976 $ 34,625
Margin 1,988 2,303 7,131 8,196
Margin rate 24.5% 22.9% 23.0% 23.7%
Expenses 1,863 2,371 7,849 8,683
Adjusted EBITDA (1) 125$ (68)$ (718)$ (487)$
By Segment:Kmart 88$ $ 40 (216)$ $ (129)Sears Domestic 37 (132) (431) (361) Sears Canada — 24 (71) 3
125$ (68)$ (718)$ (487)$
(1) Adjusted for the results of the Lands' End business which were included in our results prior to the separation.
Fourth Quarter Full Year
38
Fourth Quarter
Adjusted Segment Results
millions 2014 2013 2014 2013 2014 2013 2014 2013
Revenue $ 3,547 $ 4,007 $ 4,552 $ 4,958 $ - $ 1,097 $ 8,099 $ 10,062 Gross margin dollars 832 886 1,156 1,124 - 293 1,988 2,303
Gross margin rate 23.5% 22.1% 25.4% 22.7% 0.0% 26.7% 24.5% 22.9%
Selling and administrative 744 846 1,119 1,256 - 269 1,863 2,371
Selling and administrative expense as a percentage of total revenues 21.0% 21.1% 24.6% 25.3% 0.0% 24.5% 23.0% 23.6%
Adjusted EBITDA(1) 88 40 37 (132) - 24 125 (68)
Depreciation and amortization (23) (32) (103) (121) - (20) (126) (173)
Gain on sales of assets 27 19 32 15 - 357 59 391
Special items:Closed store reserve and severance (58) (56) (28) 4 - (51) (86) (103)Domestic pension expense - - (22) (40) - - (22) (40)Other(2) (40) - (1) - - - (41) - Impairment charges (27) (67) (11) (140) - (12) (38) (219)Lands' End separation - - - 80 - - - 80
Operating income (loss) $ (33) $ (96) $ (96) $ (334) $ - $ 298 $ (129) $ (132)
(1) Adjusted for the results of the Lands' End business which were included in our results prior to the separation.(2) Includes expenses associated with legal matters, transaction costs associated with strategic initiatives and other expenses.
Kmart Sears Domestic Sears Canada Sears Holdings
39
Full Year
Adjusted Segment Results
millions
2014 2013 2014 2013 2014 2013 2014 2013 Revenue $ 12,074 $ 13,194 $ 16,814 $ 17,635 $ 2,088 $ 3,796 $ 30,976 $ 34,625 Gross margin dollars 2,615 2,910 4,013 4,269 503 1,017 7,131 8,196
Gross margin rate 21.7% 22.1% 23.9% 24.2% 24.1% 26.8% 23.0% 23.7%
Selling and administrative 2,831 3,039 4,444 4,630 574 1,014 7,849 8,683
Selling and administrative expense as a percentage of total revenues 23.4% 23.0% 26.4% 26.3% 27.5% 26.7% 25.3% 25.1%
Adjusted EBITDA(1) (216) (129) (431) (361) (71) 3 (718) (487)
Depreciation and amortization (95) (129) (437) (511) (49) (92) (581) (732)
Gain on sales of assets 103 66 105 63 (1) 538 207 667
Special items:Closed store reserve and severance (142) (89) (55) 31 (27) (72) (224) (130)Domestic pension expense - - (89) (162) - - (89) (162)Other(2) (43) - (4) - (3) - (50) - Impairment charges (29) (70) (19) (150) (15) (13) (63) (233)Lands' End separation - - 10 150 - - 10 150
Operating income (loss) $ (422) $ (351) $ (920) $ (940) $ (166) $ 364 $ (1,508) $ (927)
(1) Adjusted for the results of the Lands' End business which were included in our results prior to the separation.(2) Includes expenses associated with legal matters, transaction costs associated with strategic initiatives and other expenses.
Kmart Sears Domestic Sears Canada Sears Holdings
40
Fourth Quarter
Reconciliation to GAAP Amounts are Preliminary and Subject to Change
millions, except per share data GAAP
DomesticPensionExpense
Domestic Closed Store
Reserve, Store Impairments
and Severance
Domestic Gain on Sales of Assets
Other Expenses
Domestic Tax Matters
As Adjusted
Gross margin impact 1,978$ —$ 10$ —$ —$ —$ 1,988$
Selling and administrative impact 2,002 (22) (76) — (41) — 1,863
Depreciation and amortization impact 126 — (1) — — — 125
Impairment charges impact 38 — (38) — — — —
Gain on sales of assets impact (59) — — 22 — — (37)
Operating loss impact (129) 22 125 (22) 41 — 37
Income tax benefit impact 63 (8) (47) 8 (15) 19 20
After tax and noncontrolling interest impact (159) 14 78 (14) 26 19 (36)
Diluted loss per share impact (1.50)$ 0.13$ 0.73$ (0.13)$ 0.25$ 0.18$ (0.34)$
millions, except per share data GAAP
DomesticPensionExpense
Domestic Closed Store
Reserve, Store Impairments
and Severance
Domestic Gain on Sales of Assets
Domestic Tax Matters
Sears Canada
SegmentLands' End Separation
As Adjusted(1)
Gross margin impact 2,482$ —$ 28$ —$ —$ (292)$ (208)$ 2,010$
Selling and administrative impact 2,613 (40) (24) — — (319) (128) 2,102
Depreciation and amortization impact 173 — (6) — — (20) (6) 141
Impairment charges impact 219 — (207) — — (12) — —
Gain on sales of assets impact (391) — — 12 — 357 — (22)
Operating loss impact (132) 40 265 (12) — (298) (74) (211)
Interest expense impact (73) — — — — 3 — (70)
Interest and investment income impact 178 — — — — (170) — 8
Other income impact 2 — — — — (3) — (1)
Income tax expense impact (125) (15) (99) 5 249 60 28 103
Income attributable to noncontrolling interest impact (208) — — — — 208 — —
After tax and noncontrolling interest impact (358) 25 166 (7) 249 (200) (46) (171)
Diluted loss per share impact (3.37)$ 0.24$ 1.56$ (0.07)$ 2.34$ (1.88)$ (0.43)$ (1.61)$
(1) Adjusted for the results of the Lands' End and Sears Canada businesses w hich w ere included in our results prior to the separation/disposition.
AdjustmentsQuarter Ended February 1, 2014
Quarter Ended January 31, 2015Adjustments
41
Full Year Reconciliation to GAAP Amounts are Preliminary and Subject to Change
millions, except per share data GAAP
DomesticPensionExpense
Domestic Closed Store
Reserve, Store Impairments
and Severance
Domestic Gain on Sales of Assets
Other Expenses
Gain on Sears
Canada Disposition
Domestic Tax Matters
Sears Canada
SegmentLands' End Separation
As Adjusted(1)
Gross margin impact 7,149$ —$ 68$ —$ —$ —$ —$ (502)$ (87)$ 6,628$
Selling and administrative impact 8,220 (89) (129) — (47) — — (603) (77) 7,275
Depreciation and amortization impact 581 — (8) — — — — (49) (3) 521
Impairment charges impact 63 — (48) — — — — (15) — —
Gain on sales of assets impact (207) — — 87 — — — (1) — (121)
Operating loss impact (1,508) 89 253 (87) 47 — — 166 (7) (1,047)
Interest expense (313) — — — — — — 5 — (308)
Interest and investment income impact 132 — — — — (70) — (38) — 24
Other income 4 — — — — — — (4) — —
Income tax expense impact (125) (33) (95) 33 (18) 26 574 136 3 501
Loss attributable to noncontrolling interest impact 128 — — — — — — (128) — —
After tax and noncontrolling interest impact (1,682) 56 158 (54) 29 (44) 574 137 (4) (830)
Diluted loss per share impact (15.82)$ 0.53$ 1.48$ (0.51)$ 0.27$ (0.41)$ 5.40$ 1.29$ (0.04)$ (7.81)$
millions, except per share data GAAP
DomesticPensionExpense
Domestic Closed Store
Reserve, Store Impairments
and Severance
Domestic Gain on Sales of Assets
Domestic Tax
Matters
Sears Canada
SegmentLands' End Separation
As Adjusted(1)
Gross margin impact 8,755$ —$ 56$ —$ —$ (1,016)$ (616)$ 7,179$
Selling and administrative impact 9,384 (162) (2) — — (1,085) (466) 7,669
Depreciation and amortization impact 732 — (11) — — (92) (22) 607
Impairment charges impact 233 — (220) — — (13) — —
Gain on sales of assets impact (667) — — 67 — 538 — (62)
Operating loss impact (927) 162 289 (67) — (364) (128) (1,035)
Interest expense impact (254) — — — — 1 — (253)
Interest and investment income impact 207 — — — — (187) — 20
Other income impact 2 — — — — (2) — —
Income tax expense impact (144) (60) (109) 26 655 59 49 476
Income attributable to noncontrolling interest impac (249) — — — — 249 — —
After tax and noncontrolling interest impact (1,365) 102 180 (41) 655 (244) (79) (792)
Diluted loss per share impact (12.87)$ 0.96$ 1.70$ (0.39)$ 6.17$ (2.30)$ (0.73)$ (7.46)$
(1) Adjusted for the results of the Lands' End and Sears Canada businesses w hich w ere included in our results prior to the separation/disposition.
Year Ended February 1, 2014Adjustments
Year Ended January 31, 2015Adjustments
a