A liquidation plan at Canada’s oldest company could begin at all of its locations as soon as Tuesday and last for up to 12 weeks, but Hudson’s Bay is still holding out hope that it will find a lifeline.

Lawyers for the beleaguered retailer said in an Ontario court Monday morning that if approved by the judge, the liquidation would span 80 stores as well as three Saks Fifth Avenue stores and 13 Saks Off 5th locations in Canada that it owns through a licensing agreement.

The process Hudson’s Bay is proposing would allow the retailer to remove some stores from the liquidation, should it find sufficient financing during the 10 to 12 weeks when lawyer Ashley Taylor expects the company to offload its inventory.

“A quick start will maximize the value of the business … and preserve whatever chance there is of a restructuring,” Taylor told Ontario Superior Court Judge Peter Osborne in a hearing at a Toronto courtroom Monday.

  • cheerytext1981@lemmy.ca
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    1 day ago

    Oh, I do.

    You raise a good question: for those staff, in the department stores, in logistics, in HR, in technology, in management, in marketing, design, etc. — how likely are they to find new work? How many of those 9000 employees will face real hardship, and how many will find new work in the role they’re in now?

    I don’t know the answers! Losing one’s job is always tough — financially, emotionally. I hope if their roles are cut they find good positions soon.

    But for Hudson’s Bay, the business? Couldn’t care less

    • HellsBelle@sh.itjust.worksOP
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      1 day ago

      It would not surprise me at all to learn that cheeto had put some pressure on HBC’s ownership to start this ball rolling. After all Trump has said he’d use economic pressure to annex Canada. Almost 10,000 people out of a job almost overnight would fit the bill.