Linens ‘n Things provided an unexpected public posting of its financial results under private equity firm Apollo Management when it recently posted its 10-k report for 2007 in conjunction with the desire of some of its private shareholders to sell shares on the NYSE. Linens ‘n Things posted a $242 million net loss in 2007 on revenue of $2.8 billion. The company had a $36 million net profit in 2005 on revenue of $2.7 billion in 2005, the last full year of public ownership (Apollo Management took the company private in February, 2006.) Linens ‘n Things gross profit margin slipped from 40.8% to 37.5% over the two year period; Selling, General & Administrative Expense increased from 38.5% to 43.7% of revenue; and interest expense increased from 0.2% to 3.9% of revenue. By comparison, publicly-owned segment leader Bed, Bath & Beyond has 2007 gross profit margin of 41.6%; Selling, General & Administrative Expense at 30.4% of revenue; and no interest expense. The Linens ‘n Things 3/20/2008 10-k report lists numerous risks, including the following: “despite current indebtedness levels the Company and its subsidiaries may still be able to incur substantially more indebtedness. This could further exacerbate the risks associated with its substantial leverage.” On April 15th, Linens ‘n Things announced that it had decided to defer $16 million quarterly interest payments due to the holders of its senior secured floating rate notes.


Entrepreneurs’ Earnings Gap
Even successful business founders typically earn 35% less than they would have working for others, according to Case Western University Professor Scott Shane, author of “The Illusions of Entrepreneurship,” reports BusinessWeek.com. “People who run their own businesses have greater job satisfaction,” states Shane, but then we create a “myth (of entrepreneurship) that says because we like it and it makes us happy, it must also make financial sense.”
Tags: entrepreneur earnings, Scott Shane