K-Mart AND Sears - both failing businesses. They are already in dire trouble. Recasting Sears as a members club is a waste of time. And the value of their RE holdings? Less than people think. Big mall locations are becoming passe. Best Buy should sell itself to Amazon as a display store, since they know perfectly well 85% of their walk-ins go out the door, go home, and order on-line for the product they were just examining.
Most of our friends are either younger/college educated Gen Xers or just plain wealthier than we are. None of them shop at malls. They haven't done so since they were teenagers. Costco, Trader Joe's, Amazon - those are today's Gods of Business for young homeowners who are beginning their prime earning years. Wal-Mart is tolerated for children's stuff because the kids are going to either outgrow it or break it anyway.
Craftsman tools and Kenmore appliances mean nothing to them. Tools come from HDepot, Lowe's, or sometimes there's a decent-sized ACE hw store. Nobody wants a Kenmore stove; they want Wolf or Bluestar, maybe Thermador or Viking. If they can't afford that it's Electrolux or Samsung.
One thing about living in CA - you really do see how the trends are going to go across the nation in the next decade. Based on what we've seen out here over the last 45 yrs as adult consumers, Sears won't even last another decade.
This made interesting reading:
http://seekingalpha.com/article/326...assets-that-remain-after-the-real-estate-sale
"... If Sears's intention is to eventually vacate most of its physical retail locations, then I'd estimate that the value of the KCD brands and the Home Services and Protection business could fall another 70% or more from its current value.
Sears does have a lot of stores remaining, but the bulk of those stores are leased locations with minimal to negative value. Sears retains approximately 60% of its owned locations, but potentially only 35% of its top owned locations in the top 149 malls. It also has retail operations that threaten to relatively quickly burn through the cash it has recently raised, and unfunded pension obligations that are increasing. "