Sears Holdings Corporation
The Hedge Fund Manager Who Killed America's Amazon
Filed: October 15, 2018
Sears was the Amazon of the 20th century — the original everything store, with a catalog that sold houses, cars, and everything in between. Then hedge fund manager Eddie Lampert bought it and ran it into the ground with a singularly destructive management philosophy: pit divisions against each other for resources, cut investment to the bone, and extract value until there was nothing left. Sears filed Chapter 11 in 2018 after 125 years.
The Numbers
Timeline of Collapse
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Richard Sears and Alvah Roebuck found Sears, Roebuck & Co. Catalog becomes America's shopping lifeline for rural families.
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First Sears retail store opens. By mid-century, Sears is the largest retailer in the world.
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Sears closes its legendary catalog — the original 'everything store' that Amazon would later digitize.
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Hedge fund manager Eddie Lampert merges Sears with Kmart. Becomes CEO. Launches radical libertarian management experiment.
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Lampert implements Ayn Rand-inspired management: divisions compete for resources, internal warfare encouraged, investment in stores cut.
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Lampert spins off Sears real estate into Seritage Growth Properties — a REIT that charges Sears rent on stores it used to own.
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Sears files Chapter 11. Total debt: $11.3 billion. Only 687 stores remain. Lampert buys the remains out of bankruptcy via ESL Investments.
Root Cause Analysis
What actually killed Sears Holdings Corporation.
- ▸ Eddie Lampert's Ayn Rand management philosophy: forced divisions to compete for resources, creating internal warfare instead of collaboration
- ▸ Systematic underinvestment in stores: Sears spent $0.87/sq ft on maintenance vs. Target's $8/sq ft
- ▸ Lampert extracted value via real estate spin-offs (Seritage), brand sales (Craftsman to Stanley B&D for $900M), and financial engineering
- ▸ E-commerce was treated as a separate, competing division rather than integrated into the business
- ▸ Leadership vacuum: Lampert ran Sears from Florida via video conference, rarely visiting stores
Lessons Learned
What investors, executives, and regulators should take away.
- ! Ayn Rand-inspired management is not a business strategy — pitting divisions against each other destroys the company
- ! When the CEO is also the largest creditor and landlord, he has no incentive to save the company — only to extract value
- ! Spending $0.87/sq ft on store maintenance communicates to customers: 'We've given up.' They respond by leaving.
- ! A 125-year-old institution can be destroyed in 13 years by one person with the wrong philosophy
Sources
All data sourced from public records. Verified against SEC filings and court documents.