Nordstrom to evaluate founding family's interest in take-private deal

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The move by CEO Erik Nordstrom (NYSE:JWN) and President Pete Nordstrom comes at a time when department store chains across the U.S. are grappling with weak sales as sticky inflation and elevated borrowing costs prompt customers to rethink their discretionary spending.

The Seattle-based retailer said the committee would evaluate any proposal from the founding family as well as other parties.

Nordstrom’s shares were up about 2% in after hours trading.

Reuters had first reported in March, citing sources, that the founding family was looking to take the company private, six years after a similar attempt turned out to be unsuccessful.

In 2017, the company announced that the members of the family had formed a group to explore the possibilities of going private, including the acquisition of all outstanding shares of the company.

But the department store operator in 2018 rejected that bid worth $8.4 billion, saying it was low. It later ended discussions with the family, which had also found it difficult to arrange for debt financing after failing to agree on an acceptable price.

© Reuters. FILE PHOTO: A Nordstrom store is pictured in New York, U.S., March 1, 2021.  REUTERS/Brendan McDermid/File Photo

The founding family currently owns about 30% of the company’s outstanding shares, as of March 2024.

Rival Macy’s (NYSE:M) has also received several offers in recent months from its investors Arkhouse Management and Brigade Capital to be taken private, while Kohl’s (NYSE:KSS) has also come under pressure as an activist hedge fund chaired by former Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper was pushing the U.S. retailer to sell itself.