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World

Department store Hudson's Bay to go private in $1.9bn deal

Iconic department store Hudson's Bay, which traces its roots in Canada's fur trade but has struggled in recent year
Published October 21, 2019
  • Iconic department store Hudson's Bay, which traces its roots in Canada's fur trade but has struggled in recent years.
  • Its board said it has accepted the sweetened Can$10.30 per share offer on the advice of a special committee's conclusion.
  • The sale must still obtain regulatory and minority shareholder approvals.

OTTAWA: Iconic department store Hudson's Bay, which traces its roots in Canada's fur trade but has struggled in recent years, will be taken private in a Can$1.9 billion (US$1.45 billion) bid led by chairman Richard Baker, it announced Monday.

Its board said it has accepted the sweetened Can$10.30 per share offer on the advice of a special committee's conclusion that the "transaction represents the best path forward for HBC."

The sale must still obtain regulatory and minority shareholder approvals.

Baker has said he hoped to turn around the business, which also owns Saks Fifth Avenue, outside the glare of public markets.

HBC is the continent's oldest company, entwined with the colonization of British North America and Canada's early development.

But amid a changing retail landscape and increased competition from online sales, department stores like HBC have struggled to maintain and attract new customers.

Its top two competitors in Canada, Eatons and Sears, are no more, while new entrants including Nordstrom have popped up recently.

In an effort to streamline and refocus, HBC recently sold off its Lord & Taylor chain and cashed out of European operations.

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