- Kohl’s CEO Michelle Gass said the retailer is doing due diligence after it received a letter from activist group Engine Capital urging the company to either consider a sale of its business or a separation of its e-commerce division.
- “Like we would any big idea, we are putting a lot of resources to understand what this means for our business,” Gass told CNBC.
Kohl’s CEO Michelle Gass said the retailer is doing due diligence after it received a letter from activist group Engine Capital urging the company to either consider a sale of its business or a separation of its e-commerce division.
“My number one priority, the number one priority of the board, is to drive shareholder value,” Gass told CNBC’s Sara Eisen in an interview Wednesday afternoon. “We are very aligned with all of our investors in doing that. We have ongoing dialogue with lots of investors. We listen to them. We hear their ideas. And we take that very seriously.”
As it relates to Engine Capital’s proposal, Gass said the company has been doing “a lot of work and will continue to do a lot of work on it to understand what this means for our business.”
“Like we would any big idea, we are putting a lot of resources to understand what this means for our business,” Gass said.
Engine Capital owns a roughly 1% stake in Kohl’s.
The trend of hiving off the digital portion of a retailer has gained in popularity as investors eye owning a piece of a faster-growing e-commerce business.The department store chain Saks Fifth Avenue split off its e-commerce business into a separate entity earlier this year. The online business is reportedly preparing to go public at a valuation of $6 billion, or roughly six-times revenue. It had a $2 billion valuation as recently as March.
Meantime, department store operator Macy’s has been urged by activist group Jana Partners to spin off its e-commerce operations from its stores, hoping to fetch a greater valuation. Macy’s has since hired consulting firm AlixPartners to review its business structure.
Despite the lofty valuations, some experts argue that the separation doesn’t make much sense if the two businesses are still sharing so many back-end operations such as the same warehouses or merchandising teams.
Kohl’s shares closed Wednesday down about 2%. The stock has climbed about 25% year to date.
Source: Business - cnbc.com