Bankruptcy judge approves Circuit City financingRICHMOND, Va. (AP)- Circuit City Stores Inc. on Monday received final approval for $1.1 billion in financing to keep operating while the nation's second-biggest electronics retailer is in Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection. U.S. Bankruptcy Judge Kevin Huennekens approved the debtor-in-possession loans at a hearing in Richmond. The financing, which replaces a $1.3 billion asset-backed loan the company had been using, will be used to stock merchandise and pay employees. Richmond, Va.-based Circuit City filed for bankruptcy protection last month as it faced pressure from vendors and consumers who aren't spending. Its Canadian operations filed for similar protection. Gregg Galardi, an attorney for Circuit City, said that since filing for bankruptcy, the company's sales have been hurt by the weak consumer spending environment and are down between 40 percent and 50 percent. Galardi called the financing and restructuring efforts a "bridge to somewhere" and said the company is still pursuing the sale of all of its assets. Circuit City, which has posted losses for seven of the last eight quarters, plans to keep operating while it develops a reorganization plan to deal with significant declines in traffic and heightened competition from rival Best Buy Co. and others. The judge also approved a motion to void severance agreements with about 40 former employees, including Philip J. Schoonover, who stepped down as chairman, president and CEO in September. Several details under the motion must still be resolved, including whether some of the employees could seek to be paid when the retailer emerges from bankruptcy. Circuit City also was able to break service agreements with Google Inc. and National Service Alliance Inc., and hotel reservation contracts with the MGM Grand Hotel & Casino in Las Vegas and The Jefferson Hotel in Richmond. The company said the contracts were "financially burdensome and unnecessary," according to court documents. The court filings did not say how much Circuit City would save by voiding the contracts. Schoonover, who was replaced by Vice Chairman and Acting President and CEO James A. Marcum, was expected to receive at least $1.8 million in a severance deal after resigning from his post, according to regulatory filings. The company, which said it had $3.4 billion in assets and $2.32 billion in liabilities as of Aug. 31, hopes to emerge from court protection in the first half of next year. At that point, it could seek a buyer or operate on its own again. (Copyright 2008 by The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.) The following comments do not necessarily represent the views of WAGT. Users have agreed to these terms and in doing so accept full responsibility for their comments. Moderation is limited. Hide commentsMost PopularMore Good Stuff |
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