Apr. 23, 2025 "Hudson's Bay to sell off all merchandise at 6 stores previously spared from liquidation": Today I found this article on CBC:
Hudson's Bay Co. will start selling off all merchandise on Friday at the six stores previously spared from liquidation, effectively ending the retail empire's reign and significantly dimming the possibility that the business dating back to 1670 will stay alive.
Canada's oldest company is making the move because "it is unlikely" that it will find a buyer for the remaining locations, Adam Zalev, managing director of Hudson's Bay's financial adviser Reflect Advisors, said in an affidavit sent to lawyers on Wednesday.
Reached for comment about the latest developments, Hudson's Bay spokesperson Tiffany Bourré said she had nothing to add beyond the court documents.
'Low probability' of bid for 6-store model
The six stores were excluded from the liquidation, which began at the company's 90 other locations last month, because it hoped to find an investor or buyer that could restructure or maintain the business.
Zalev, who did not offer further comment, now said those six locations excluded from the sell-off are
"negatively impacting" Hudson's Bay's ability to find a backer
and there is "low probability" that a bid centred around a six-store model will surface.
However, he said, if a bid for the stores is received that keeps them alive, Hudson's Bay retains the right to remove them from the liquidation process, which is due to wrap up by June 15.
The additional liquidation detailed in Zalev's affidavit is a painful but not unexpected turn of events for a company that filed for creditor protection last month, citing significant difficulty paying its bills because of
the U.S. trade war,
the effects of the COVID-19 pandemic
and a lack of downtown traffic.
His affidavit comes after the 355-year-old company received court permission last month to liquidate dozens of Bay locations, 13 Saks Off Fifth stores and several Saks Fifth Avenue sites in Canada, putting 9,364 jobs in jeopardy.
The sell-off was being carried out while the company began two processes
to find investors or buyers that could carry the retailer forward by buying its assets
or taking over its leases.
Zalev's prior court filings say 18 unnamed parties, including some landlords, submitted letters of intent expressing interest in a total of 65 leases.
Zalev's latest affidavit was filed the evening before Hudson's Bay was due to return to the Ontario Superior Court of Justice to seek permission to auction off its collection of 1,700 pieces of art and more than 2,700 artifacts through a sale run by Heffel Gallery Limited.
Concerns from historians, governments, institutions
The auction has sparked concerns from archival institutions, governments and historians, who told Hudson's Bay they don't want the pieces to be a second thought or fall into private hands.
Zalev's affidavit came with several documents that offered a hint of just how concerned many of these groups are about those possibilities.
One of the documents was a letter from Grand Chief Kyra Wilson of the Assembly of Manitoba Chiefs, who requested a halt to any auction because of
"the profound cultural, spiritual, and historical significance to First Nations people,"
saying Indigenous groups must be included in the process.
"Selling these items at auction without full transparency and consultation with impacted First Nations would not only be morally irresponsible but also represent a continuation of the colonial dispossession of First Nations' lands and belongings that the HBC directly profited from for centuries," Wilson wrote.
"The HBC's legacy is inseparable from the post-contact history of the original peoples on this land.
These artifacts are not simply 'valuable assets' or one-of-a-kind collectibles,
but pieces of living history,
some of which may be sacred, stolen from First Nations or properly First Nations-owned."
On top of asking for the halt of any auction, she requested the company commit to a First Nations-led review process and make public a full catalogue of items being considered for liquidation.
The company has yet to reveal what it plans to sell at auction beyond the charter.
However, a source familiar with the auction process, who was not authorized to speak publicly, has told The Canadian Press the items proposed to be auctioned off include paintings dating back to 1650, point blankets, paper documents and even collectible Barbie dolls.
Zalev's affidavit also contained a letter from the Canada Advisory Committee for Memory of the World requesting that the charter be transferred to a public archival institution, such as the Archives of Manitoba, to which Hudson's Bay donated thousands of its artifacts decades ago.
The request was being made "to ensure that this internationally significant, unique, and irreplaceable document is not placed at risk during the transfer of corporate ownership," committee chair Cody Groat said in his letter.
https://www.cbc.ca/news/business/hudson-bay-merchandise-liquidation-six-stores-1.7516824
May 27, 2025 "Hudson's Bay to lay off more than 8,300 employees by June 1": Today I found this article by Jenna Benchetrit on CBC:
Hudson's Bay will lay off more than 8,300 employees — about 89 per cent of its workforce — by Sunday, according to documents published Monday evening, at which point the retailer will have closed all its stores and its liquidation sale will have run its course.
CBC News previously reported that the Canadian brand was expected to wind down its operating stores on June 1, and that the majority of its employees would likely be terminated by then.
Some employees will be kept on staff to help sell any in-store furniture and to shut down the remaining locations. Once the company's distribution centres close on June 15, an additional 899 employees are expected to be laid off.
The remaining 118 employees will help the company carry out its obligations through the Companies' Creditors Arrangement Act, the documents said.
Some workers are eligible for severance pay and other wages under the Wage Earner Protection Program Act, the documents noted.
The act protects employees during scenarios where they are owed money by an employer undergoing insolvency.
A court order will determine whether Hudson's Bay employees can apply for benefits under the WEPP. However, the law firm representing those workers says the amount of wages will vary between employees and are not guaranteed.
"Given HBC's significant amount of secured debt, it is not clear that employees will be able to recover any amounts owing to them directly from HBC," read a post on the firm's website.
https://www.cbc.ca/news/business/hudsons-bay-8300-employees-june-1-1.7544639
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