KEY POINTS
  • The parent of Sears and Kmart is set to layoff 250 employees and close even more stores than expected, putting a dent in promises of revival laid out by its longtime chairman, Eddie Lampert.
  • An affiliate of Lampert's hedge fund bought Sears and Kmart after former parent Sears Holdings filed for bankruptcy in October. 
  • Lampert said the deal would save jobs and keep stores open, but the business is shrinking faster than previously projected.
A woman walks past store closing signs at a Sears in New Hyde Park, New York, October 10, 2018.

The parent of Sears and Kmart is set to layoff 250 employees and close even more stores than expected, putting a dent in the promises of revival laid out by its longtime chairman, Eddie Lampert.

Through an affiliate of his hedge fund ESL Investments, Lampert bought Sears and Kmart after their former parent, Sears Holdings, filed for bankruptcy in October. Sears had been unable to tackle its debt load and faced robust competition from Walmart, Target and Amazon. Without the roughly $5 billion deal Lampert led, the company would have liquidated.