Green thumb? Try gangrene.
thestandard.com
November 15, 2000, 1:32 PM PST
Frost Hits Garden.com
The online retailer fails to secure financing or find a buyer, so its retail operations will be plowed under.
By Reuters
AUSTIN, Texas (Reuters) – Garden.com (GDEN) Inc. (GDEN), an online retailer of gardening products, on Wednesday said it will shut down its retail operations and plans to sell its consumer business assets after it failed to secure financing to fund operations or find a buyer for the company.
The Austin, Texas-based company, the latest victim in the shakeout in the online retail sector, also said it plans a "phased layoff" of its consumer business employees.
The company cut 30 percent of its work force on Sept. 28. At that time Garden.com said it hired investment bank Robertson Stephens to evaluate strategic alternatives for the company.
Shares of Garden.com, which have been on a steady downward slide over the past several months, were down 75 percent by midafternoon at 1/16. The stock's 52-week high was $15 a share back at the end of 1999.
Garden.com's demise comes on the heels of several other Internet retailers recently shutting their virtual doors. MotherNature.com (MTHR) (MTHR), which sold health care products, and Pets.com (IPET) Inc. (IPET), a retailer of pet-related products, both ceased operations earlier this month.
Additionally, Priceline.com Inc. (PCLN) shut down its WebHouse online grocery service and closely held Furniture.com, which sold furniture and home decor products online, also closed its doors.
Although many industry watchers were not surprised at the failure of most online retailers, Garden.com's demise appears to have struck a chord with some as many people thought the site's editorial content was unique and because it didn't appear to have many online competitors.
Some analysts said they often thought Garden.com was destined to be snatched up by one of the larger traditional home improvement retailers, such as No. 1 player Home Depot (HD) Inc. (HD.N)
But that prospect did not pan out as Home Depot, like many top traditional retailers, has yet to fully roll out its own online retail venture.
"When it comes to actually selling products, the gardening market has two issues: it tends to be something that people want to go to the store to buy and also shipping costs can get really high," said David Cooperstein, director of consumer e-commerce research at Forrester Research (FORR) .
In addition, Cooperstein said most gardening products, like potting soil or perennial plant bulbs, don't necessarily spark the kind of brand loyalty from consumers that other retail products do, making it difficult for suppliers to compete for dollars.
Garden.com's closure comes just over a year after the company's initial public offering, during which it raised about $49.2 million selling 4.1 million shares, or a 24 percent stake in the company, at $12 a share.
On the day of its IPO, the company's share price surged 59 percent to close at $19-1/16 on the Nasdaq stock market, surprising most analysts who at the time had not expected online retail businesses to fare well in what was already a rapidly deteriorating market for dot-coms.
"Despite every best effort...to rebuild stockholder value and ensure a future for Garden.com's consumer business, all possible avenues have been exhausted and it is clear that the only course of action available to us is to conduct a staged shut-down of our retail operations," President and Chief Executive Cliff Sharples said in a statement on Wednesday.
Garden.com said the consumers assets that are fit to be sold include product inventory, some of its Web addresses, editorial content, photo library, online gardening tools and planners, as well as other intellectual property.
The company said it will lay off its employees in phases as it continues with a "going out of business" sale to consumers. In September, the company said it had laid off 93 of its 246 employees, leaving 153 on staff.
Garden.com said while reducing its operating expenses and marketing costs in an effort to slow its cash burn rate, it also attempted to find additional funding for operations, and also sought out a partner or acquirer for the company.
"While that search included contacts with several interesting prospects, none were prepared to fund or acquire the company," the company said in a statement.
Earlier this week, the company posted a first-quarter loss of $9.9 million, or 56 cents a share, versus a loss of $5.6 million, or $1.45 a share, in the year-ago quarter. Revenues were $2.6 million versus $1.4 million a year ago.
The first quarter loss was narrower than Wall Street analysts on average had expected, which was a loss of 62 cents a share, according to First Call/Thomson Financial.
Copyright 2000, Reuters News Service |