The company that owns Sears is trying to buy back all of the Sears Hometown and Outlet Stores, which were separated into a different company in 2012.
The move set off a spate of media reports that Sears Hometown might liquidate instead, according to Chain Store Age and Crain’s Chicago Business.
However, Sears Hometown did close some stores this year, including one in Newport.
ESL Investments, through its affiliate Transform Holdco LLC, on April 5proposed that it buy all common stock of Sears Hometown that is not currently owned by ESL and its affiliates. ESL owns a majority 58.8 percent stake in Sears Hometown.
Transform offered a price of $2.25 per share. Sears Hometown stock was trading at that price around 1:30 p.m. Tuesday.
But Sears Hometown said on April 8 that a committee it had formed to consider the stock purchase had decided it was not in the best interest of Sears Hometown. The two parties are continuing their discussions, according to a Sears Hometown statement.
The company continues to lose money. It had a net loss of $53 million for the fiscal year ended Feb. 2, 2019.
In a statement when the results were released on March 29, the company’s CEO Will Powell said Sears Hometown made some progress in trimming losses in the fourth quarter by closing, or starting to close, 105 stores. The company has a total of 677 Hometown and Outlet stores.
Despite efforts to improve the productivity of stores, he said, “we expect we will close a group of Hometown stores in the first quarter of 2019.” He did not specify which stores would be affected.
A Sears Hometown spokesperson did not respond directly to whether any Maine stores would close, but said the company, “is always evaluating our network to determine which communities are best served by our stores. In some cases, for a variety of reasons, we opt to close certain stores.”
This article originally appeared on www.bangordailynews.com.