Wattles
Capital Management Delivers Letter to Circuit City Board of
Directors
Calls
for Certain Immediate Changes Including the Replacement of Philip Schoonover as
Company's Chairman and CEO and a Change in Company's Focus to the Most Immediate
and Least Capital-intensive Opportunities to Improve the Health of the
Business
Demands
the Board Engage a Nationally Recognized Investment Bank to Evaluate Any
Indications of Interest from a Potential Acquirer or Merger Partner
Requests
meeting with the Board or its Lead Director As Soon As Possible to Discuss
Wattles Capital Management's Concerns
LAS
VEGAS, April 2, 2008 -- Wattles Capital Management, LLC ("WCM") announced today
that it delivered a letter to the Board of Directors of Circuit City Stores,
Inc. ("Circuit City") (NYSE: CC - News) expressing its
significant concerns with Circuit City's current business strategy and
requesting certain immediate actions by Circuit City's Board.
The
full text of the letter follows:
Dear
Members of the Circuit City Board:
Wattles
Capital Management, LLC ("WCM") is one of the largest independent stockholders
of Circuit City Stores, Inc. ("Circuit City" or the "Company"). WCM and its
affiliates beneficially own 11,000,000 shares of common stock of Circuit City,
or approximately 6.5% of the shares outstanding.
Despite
the Company's unsuccessful "turnaround" efforts under Philip Schoonover, we
strongly believe there is the potential to unlock hundreds of millions of value
in the near term and billions of value in the long term for Circuit City
stockholders. However, we have serious concerns with the Company's current
business strategy and operating performance; concerns that we believe are shared
by many of the Company's largest stockholders. While we applaud any management
team that is focused on making its business more efficient, Mr. Schoonover and
his senior management team appear to have focused on cost-cutting measures with
very little or no consideration for their negative impact on revenue and gross
profit. Circuit City's senior management has repeatedly touted the fact that
they have cut $200 million of annualized selling, general and administrative
expenses while ignoring the fact that approximately $500 million of gross profit
has been wiped-out in the process.
As
stockholders are very well aware, the net impact of this senior management
team's "turnaround" effort which has focused on cost-cutting has been
disastrous. In fiscal 2006, Circuit City's net income was approximately $140
million. By fiscal 2007, net income had declined to a loss of more than $8
million. For fiscal 2008, we expect Circuit City to report significantly greater
losses. Circuit City's senior management has repeatedly blamed its declining
performance on outside factors such as the economy and increased competition
from mass merchants. While those factors no doubt affect the Company's
performance, it is important to note that several other electronics specialty
retailers affected by those same factors have increased their revenues and
earnings over the same period. We are confident that the right senior management
team with the right strategy and focus would be able to immediately and
dramatically improve Circuit City's profitability.
As you
know, WCM has nominated a slate of five highly qualified directors for election
at the 2008 annual meeting. Our nominees are committed to a comprehensive review
of Circuit City's strategy, operations and senior management personnel, with the
goal of formulating and implementing a company-wide plan to quickly restore the
health of Circuit City's operations and maximize stockholder value. We believe
that there are major shortcomings with the performance of the Company's senior
management team and continue to question how Circuit City's performance can
decline so precipitously despite Circuit City's significant competitive
advantages, including:
--
Its powerful brand with a long history and enormous reach across a
wide range of
demographic groups;
--
National advertising capabilities;
--
A store base that has been and still has the ability to be
very productive;
and
--
Its strong cash position, minimal debt and access to a
newly-expanded line of
credit.
We also
believe that Circuit City should be able to capitalize on certain
industry-related factors that play into its favor, such as our belief that
consumer electronics suppliers need a viable "number two" player to keep Best
Buy from having too much leverage and that years still remain in the current
flat panel TV upgrade cycle.
Unfortunately,
stockholders continue to suffer despite Circuit City's significant resources and
competitive advantages. Approximately two years ago, after what turned out to be
a temporary industry-wide oversupply of flat-panel TVs, Circuit City's senior
management initiated a "turnaround" to address what it perceived as a permanent
reset to a lower level of gross margins in the industry. Since then, the
competition's gross margins have essentially recovered, but Circuit City's have
further deteriorated, resulting in a "turnaround" that has unfortunately gone in
the wrong direction. We believe this has been due, in part, to senior management
searching for a "silver bullet" rather than focusing on basic retail execution,
such as having the right products for sale, priced strategically, displayed
well, and sold by the right people. As a result, Circuit City's performance is
now significantly worse than when the turnaround first began. Through a
combination of poor decision-making and poor execution, Circuit City's so-called
"turnaround" has adversely impacted the Company's operating performance,
destroying billions of dollars of stockholder value in the process. While we
cannot say whether a turnaround was needed at Circuit City two years ago, it is
quite clear to us that one is needed now.
We
successfully completed a turnaround of a 32-store chain of consumer electronics
stores we acquired as a result of Ultimate Electronics' bankruptcy in 2005. The
Ultimate Electronics turnaround story is relevant to the Circuit City turnaround
situation for several reasons; similar to Circuit City, its stores are
approximately 33,000 square feet and compete head-to-head with Best Buy.
Moreover, many of the same operational issues that are currently plaguing
Circuit City, were also adversely affecting Ultimate Electronics when we first
became involved, including poor assortment planning and in-store merchandising,
suboptimal and inconsistent pricing, ineffective promotional strategies, and
high store-level employee turnover coupled with low morale.
We
assembled a new management team and worked with them to formulate and implement
a company-wide plan to build sales while increasing gross margin, and in the
process restore the health of the business. We accomplished this by focusing on
increasing revenue through solid retail execution, including improving the
product assortment and in-store merchandising, rationalizing and integrating
pricing with the promotional strategy, and rebuilding the stores' sales culture
and employee morale. As a result, Ultimate Electronics stores today have
positive same store sales, increasing gross margins and increasing
EBITDA.
We are
confident that, with the right senior management team, the right strategy and
the right focus, Circuit City can overcome its operational problems and
turnaround its struggling business. WCM's primary goal is to help restore
investor faith in Circuit City and unlock the Company's significant unrealized
value by pushing for the following immediate changes:
--
Replace the current Chairman and CEO with a seasoned executive
capable of
restoring credibility with employees, vendors and stockholders;
--
Focus on the "customer experience" and strategies for making the current
stores more productive;
--
Begin addressing the actual issues facing the Company and drive revenue
growth,
rather than focusing on cost-cutting strategies and "spin" campaigns.
--
Focus on the most immediate and least capital-intensive opportunities
to
improve the health of the business; and
--
Develop and articulate a deliverable promise for the new "The
City" brand
that works within the realities of the current store footprints.
While the
ultimate goal for any business should be to outperform its competitors, we do
not believe Circuit City needs to outperform or even perform anywhere near the
level of Best Buy in order to significantly increase stockholder value. The
Company's Board and senior management team should focus on becoming good before
it attempts to become great. Therefore, we encourage Circuit City to focus on
the most achievable and nearest-term opportunities for improving operating
performance in order to achieve a level of profitability comparable to that of
years prior to 2008. Only then should the Company turn its attention to more
speculative or more capital-intensive measures aimed at making the Company
great.
Unfortunately,
given the loss of credibility resulting from a string of missteps, we do not
believe that the current senior management team can now lead a turnaround
successfully. We urge each member of the Board to ask themselves how much more
stockholder value needs to be lost before the Board recognizes that a change in
leadership is essential.
In
addition to demanding the Board replace Mr. Schoonover as Circuit City's
Chairman and CEO, we have nominated for election to Circuit City's Board a
highly qualified slate of five individuals who possess a combination of retail,
turnaround and finance experience to assist the Company in overcoming the
challenges it now faces. As it relates to these nominees, we are in receipt of a
letter dated February 28, 2008 from Reginald D. Hedgebeth, the Company's Senior
VP, General Counsel and Secretary, requesting meetings between each of our
nominees and the Company's Nominating & Governance Committee. Our director
nominees would be willing to meet with the Nominating & Governance Committee
to discuss their respective backgrounds and qualifications if the Board is
willing to commit in writing, without conditions, to the nomination of our
director nominees as the Company's director candidates for election at the 2008
Annual Meeting, subject only to their interviews confirming their
qualifications. That our slate of nominees is highly qualified to serve as
directors of Circuit City should be readily apparent from the Nomination Letter
that includes all of the information that would be required to be disclosed for
director nominees in proxy materials pursuant to Regulation 14A. Please note
that our director nominees have no interest in participating in an evaluation
process or interview as a mere formality so that you can disclose in the
Company's proxy materials that you evaluated and considered us as the Company's
director nominees, but nevertheless resolved to recommend the previously
identified director candidates for election.
We also
urge the Board not to summarily dismiss any legitimate, third party interest in
acquiring or merging with the Company. On two separate occasions in the last
five years, Circuit City's Board has rejected what appeared to be legitimate
interest in acquiring the Company. In June 2003, the Board rejected an offer of
$8 per share. Then in February 2005, the Board rejected an offer of $17 per
share. Today, Circuit City's shares are valued at approximately $4 per share.
Needless to say, stockholders would have been much better off if the Board had
accepted either of those offers. Therefore, if the Company receives any
expression or indication of interest from a potential acquirer or merger
partner, we demand the Board immediately engage a nationally recognized
investment bank to assist in the evaluation of any such expression of interest.
We remind the Board of its fiduciary duties to stockholders, and urge the Board
to give stockholders the opportunity to decide for themselves whether or not any
third party proposal or offer at a reasonable premium to the current stock price
is the best way to maximize stockholder value.
We would
like to reiterate that we are committed, long-term stockholders whose preference
is to work with the Company - not against it - in doing what is best for all
stockholders. We request a meeting with the Board or its lead director as soon
as possible to discuss our concerns. Please contact the undersigned at (303)
801-4003 in order to schedule a meeting.
Respectfully,
/s/
Mark Wattles
About
Wattles Capital Management, LLC
Wattles
Capital Management, LLC ("WCM") makes public and private investments primarily
in retail, entertainment and consumer products companies where it sees the
potential to increase value through growth or an operating turnaround. WCM was
founded and is managed by Mark Wattles, the founder, Chairman and CEO
responsible for building more than 2,000 Hollywood Videos and 700 Game Crazy
stores before selling the Company for approximately $1.25 billion in April 2005.
WCM has an operating group that has significant expertise in managing rapid
growth and turnaround situations. As such, WCM is well-positioned to invest in
companies that it believes require more active involvement in order to realize
value. In addition to its significant position in Circuit City Stores, Inc., WCM
owns and operates a chain of consumer electronics superstores operating under
the name Ultimate Electronics.
CERTAIN
INFORMATION CONCERNING PARTICIPANTS
Wattles
Capital Management, LLC ("WCM"), together with the other Participants (as
defined below), intends to make a preliminary filing with the Securities and
Exchange Commission ("SEC") of a proxy statement and accompanying proxy card to
be used to solicit votes for the election of its slate of director nominees at
the 2008 annual meeting of shareholders of Circuit City Stores, Inc., a Virginia
corporation (the "Company").
WCM
STRONGLY ADVISES ALL SHAREHOLDERS OF THE COMPANY TO READ THE PROXY STATEMENT
WHEN IT IS AVAILABLE BECAUSE IT WILL CONTAIN IMPORTANT INFORMATION. SUCH PROXY
STATEMENT WILL BE AVAILABLE AT NO CHARGE ON THE SEC'S WEB SITE AT HTTP://WWW.SEC.GOV.
IN ADDITION, THE PARTICIPANTS IN THE SOLICITATION WILL PROVIDE COPIES OF THE
PROXY STATEMENT WITHOUT CHARGE UPON REQUEST. REQUESTS FOR COPIES SHOULD BE
DIRECTED TO THE PARTICIPANTS' PROXY SOLICITOR.
The
participants in the proxy solicitation are anticipated to be WCM, HKW Trust,
Mark J. Wattles, James A. Marcum, Elliott Wahle, Don R. Kornstein, Anthony
Bergamo and Alexander M. Bond (collectively, the "Participants"). As of February
28, 2008, WCM beneficially owned 11,000,000 shares of common stock of the
Company (the "Shares"), consisting of 1,000,000 Shares owned by HKW Trust. The
11,000,000 Shares beneficially owned by WCM constitutes approximately 6.5% of
the Shares outstanding. Because Mr. Wattles owns all of the membership interests
of WCM and serves as sole trustee of HKW Trust, he may be deemed to beneficially
own the 11,000,000 Shares beneficially owned by WCM and HKW Trust. Mr. Bond
directly owns 10,000 Shares. Mr. Bergamo directly owns 15,000 Shares. Mr.
Kornstein directly owns 5,500 Shares. Mr. Marcum directly owns 6,200 Shares. Mr.
Wahle directly owns 7,500 Shares. As members of a "group" for the purposes of
Rule 13d-5(b)(1) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended, each of
Messrs. Marcum, Wahle, Kornstein, Bergamo and Bond is deemed to beneficially own
the 11,000,000 Shares owned by WCM, constituting approximately 6.5% of the
Shares outstanding.
Contact:
Wattles
Capital Management, LLC
Mark
J. Wattles: (303) 801-4003
Alex
Bond: (503) 348-0933