Tag: Business

  • Secretive Cerberus keeps a high profile on K Street (Muckety.com)

    Cerberus Capital Management, once touted for its daring investments in Chrysler and GMAC, is now struggling to avoid tremendous losses, according to The New York Times.

    Yesterday, Chrysler announced that U.S. sales fell by a third last month. In a one-two punch, GMAC said yesterday that its home loan division would dismiss 60 percent of its employees – 5,000 people – in an effort to minimize losses caused by the mortgage crisis.

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    As the Times notes, company CEO Stephen A. Feinberg, who founded the hedge fund with $10 million in 1992, keeps a low profile.

    But in Washington, Cerberus maintains a major presence, paying seven lobbying firms and former U.S. Sen. Jake Garn to represent its interests before Congress.

    Former Treasury counsel Arnold I. Havens, now a partner with Jones Walker, represents the firm on banking and transportation issues.

    Former U.S. senator and ambassador to Germany Dan Coats, now senior counsel at King & Spalding, represents Cerberus on banking regulation.

    Patton Boggs argues for the company on auto emissions legislation. Stanley B. Parrish, former chief of staff to Sen. Orrin Hatch, represents it on auto-related matters.

    Cerberus itself has registered as a lobbyist. The company reported spending $2.5 million on lobbying activities last year.

    The company has worked against hedge fund regulation and has supported members of Congress who feel the same way. When Sen. Richard Shelby, then chairman of the Senate Banking Committee, criticized hege funds in 2003, Cerberus threw a fundraiser for Shelby’s leadership PAC. Ine a single day, The Hill reported, company executives and colleagues contributed $99,500.

    Thus far in 2008, company execs are among the top contributors to Republican congressmen Tom Reynolds, Joe Knollenberg and Fred Upton. They have also given to two Michigan Democrats who hold sway on auto legislation: Sen. Carl Levin and Rep. Carolyn Cheeks Kilpatrick of Detroit.

  • Billionaire Charles Koch plays politics, but out of public eye (Muckety)

    Charles G. Koch may be the richest and most politically connected mogul you’ve never heard of.

    Koch (pronounced coke) heads Koch Industries, the world’s largest private company with oil refineries, gas pipelines, cattle ranches, paper mills and financial services that produce an estimated $90 billion in revenue a year. Although Koch is richer than George Soros or Carl Icahn – and spends millions each year to lobby Congress and to bankroll libertarian causes – he is largely unknown outside of his hometown of Wichita, KS.

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    Which is apparently just the way he likes it.

    “I don’t want to dedicate my life to getting publicity,” he told the New York Times more than a decade ago after his younger brother, William, a former America’s Cup winner, brought suit, claiming he had been cheated out of his rightful share of the company, and thereby, opening the company to scrutiny. The suit was eventually settled.

    But though Charles Koch, now 72, prefers to fly below the radar, he is a true believer in what he refers to as the “science of market-based management.” Both he and his younger brother, David H., a co-owner of the family business, have disseminated Libertarian principles by pouring millions of dollars into conservative think tanks and advocacy groups, in addition to direct lobbying of Congress.

    Koch Industries contributes more money to candidates through its political action committee (KochPAC) and its 80,000 employees, than any other oil or gas company – donating $1.15 million during the 2008 election cycle, according to the Center for Responsive Politics. The lion’s share of that, or 85 percent, went to Republicans; 15 percent went to Democrats.

    (For comparison’s sake, the next biggest contributor, among major oil or gas companies, was Exxon Mobil, which donated $674, 359 in the 2008 cycle so far).

    Very little, however, went to presumptive Republican nominee John McCain, though McCain has received millions from other oil and gas companies.

    Although Koch Industry’s former top lobbyist – Nancy Mitchell Pfotenhauer – advises McCain on economic issues – the company has contributed only $6,750 to the GOP candidate thus far, according to the CRP. It has given nothing to Illinois Sen. Barack Obama, the presumptive Democratic nominee.

    But Koch has donated generously to several Republican committees, including the Republican National Committee ($30,000), the National Republican Congressional Committee ($30,000), the National Republican Senatorial Committee ($30,000) and the National Democratic Senatorial Committee ($30,000), as well as to a slew of mostly GOP lawmakers.

    Recipients of its largesse to Congress include Texas Republicans Joe Barton, Michael Burgess and John Culberson, and also Todd Tiahrt of Kansas (where Koch is headquartered), Paul Broun Jr. of Georgia, and Roy Blunt of Missouri; Top Senate recipients include Republicans Sam Brownback and Pat Roberts of Kansas, Mitch McConnell of Kentucky, Saxby Chambliss of Georgia, and John Barrasso of Wyoming, according to CRP.

    But the brothers exert their greatest influence by seeding interconnected, libertarian-leaning advocacy groups and think tanks, bankrolled by foundations they control – the Charles G. Koch Charitable Foundation, the Claude R. Lambe Charitable Foundation and the David H. Koch Charitable Foundation, according to their tax filings.

    Top recipients are the Cato Institute, the Reason Foundation, the Institute for Humane Studies, the Heritage Foundation, the Federalist Society and the Mercatus Center at George Mason University – all of which issue papers or advocate for the principles of free enterprise, market-friendly public policies including deregulation, and individual liberties.

    David H. Koch was the Libertarian Party’s vice-presidential candidate in 1980, and serves as a director of the Cato Institute and the Reason Foundation, both Libertarian-leaning think tanks.

    “It’s astounding that so few people have ever heard of a family this rich and powerful and aggressive when it comes to policy and politics,” analyst Jeff Krehely told the Center for Public Integrity. “When you talk about Koch, most folks think you are talking about the soft drink company.”

    The Koches seem to have inherited their conservatism from their father. Fred Koch, the son of a Dutch immigrant who originally ran a Texas newspaper, developed a more efficient method of refining crude oil into gasoline in the late 1920s.

    After being hit with patent suits from several oil companies, he emigrated to the Soviet Union where he helped build refineries for Josef Stalin. But he developed such a hatred for communism there that upon his return to the U.S., he became a member of the John Birch Society, according to a Forbes profile of the company.

    All of his sons seem to have gotten his engineering gifts. Charles and David Koch got basic and advanced engineering degrees from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. After working for several years for Arthur Little Inc., Charles Koch returned to Wichita after his father threatened to sell the business, and took control after his father’s death in 1967.

    When he took over Koch Industries was a motley collection of oil pipeline assets with revenues of $250 million, according to the New York Times.

    Charles expanded the pipelines and refineries, increased oil exploration and added natural gas, asphalt, paper products and chemicals to the product lines. Although there have been bumps along the way, he has grown the company into a conglomerate that sells everything from Stainmaster carpets and Dixie cups to oil and gas. His acquisition of Georgia-Pacific Corporation for $21 billion in late 2005 made Koch the largest privately held company in the nation.

    Asked in 2006 whether he would ever sell shares of the company to the public, Charles Koch replied: “Over my dead body.”

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  • Whole Foods, but not the whole story

    So, now we know how at least one corporate CEO got his kicks. For years, he posted on financial bulletin boards, under an alias, sometimes criticizing the competition.

    “I posted on Yahoo! under a pseudonym because I had fun doing it,” Whole Foods CEO John Mackey acknowledged on his company’s Web site last night. “I never intended any of those postings to be identified with me.”

    Mackey used the pseudonym “Rahodeb,” a variation on his wife’s name, Deborah, from 1999 until last summer The New York Times reported.

    The FTC, which is trying to block Whole Foods’ acquisition of another organic grocer, Wild Oats, disclosed the pseudonym in a footnote in a court document. Using his alias, Mackey had posted about Wild Oats.

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    • Ann Fudge’s lengthy resume

      October 8, 2010 at 8:24am

      While there doesn’t appear to be a front-runner to replace Lawrence Summers as President Obama’s chief economic adviser, most lists of potential candidates include Ann Fudge.

    • Golf and cards consumed too much of Cayne’s final days at Bear Stearns

      Recent history has not been kind to James E. Cayne, the CEO who has been blamed for the collapse of Bear Stearns, the investment bank that was sold at a bargain basement price to JP Morgan Chase earlier this year.

      “Perhaps unfairly, he will probably go down in the annals of finance as the Nero of the credit crisis,” writes William D. Cohan, in story to be published in the Aug. 18 edition of Fortune magazine.

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      “Instead of fiddling while Bear Stearns burned, his detractors say he was golfing too regularly at the Hollywood Golf Club in Deal, N.J., and playing championship-level bridge in Nashville, San Francisco and Detroit.”

      Cohan’s profile is based on a series of interviews with Cayne, the first he has granted since Bear Stearns was sold.

      Among other details, the story reveals that Cayne battled a life-threatening illness last September as his company’s troubles began to mount.

      On Sept. 11, 2007, Cayne was hospitalized with what turned out to be sepsis. In his case, the blood infection had begun with an infected prostate.

      Cayne lost 30 pounds during his 10-day stay in the hospital.

      His illness was not made public for fear the news hurt his firm’s stock price.

      The story also expands upon earlier reports that Cayne was literally out-of-touch during parts of the Bear Stearns crisis, away from the home office and playing bridge.

      “When playing tournaments, Cayne, who only recently got his first cell phone and has no BlackBerry, was hard to reach,” Cohan writes.

      Consequently, Cayne, 74, seems to always be getting bad news late and arriving at key meetings after they have started.

      And by his own admission, he wasn’t aware of how much Bear Stearns had borrowed to invest in two of its mortgage-based hedge funds.

      “I didn’t stop it. I didn’t rein in the leverage,” Cayne says.

      When the value of the funds dropped, lenders started pounding on Bear Stearns’ door and the company couldn’t meet its obligations.

      At this point, Cayne, who was in the past a confident, instinctive decision-maker, describes himself as confused and hesitant.

      “It was not knowing what to do,” he says. “It’s not being able to make a definitive decision one way or the other, because I just couldn’t tell you what was going to happen.”

      Under Cayne’s leadership prior to the crisis, the value of Bear Stearns’ stock had risen to as much as $143 a share, making Cayne and many other employees very rich.

      The sale of the firm cost Cayne $1 billion, leaving him with a net worth of $600 million.

      After the sale, Cayne did not receive “a face-saving senior-level job at JP Morgan Chase,” Cohan writes.

      Alan “Ace” Greenberg, the Bear Stearns CEO before Cayne, was named vice chairman emeritus at JP Morgan. Alan Schwartz, who took over as CEO at Bear Stearns after Cayne, was also offered a position at JP Morgan, though he’s leaving at the end of the month.

      In the profile, Cayne takes a few shots at Greenberg, the man who hired him at Bear Stearns in part because he and Cayne both played bridge.

      And Cayne recalls that during his job interview Greenberg asked him how well he played.

      “‘Mr. Greenberg,’” Cayne responded. “‘If you study bridge the rest of your life, if you play with the best partners and you achieve your potential, you will never play bridge like I play bridge.’”

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    • Randy Michaels built a radio empire, but does he have a plan for newspapers?

      What might Tribune Company COO Randy Michaels be thinking?

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      The latest wave of departures among Tribune top brass – Los Angeles Times Publisher David Hiller and longtime Chicago Tribune Editor Ann Marie Lipinski resigned this week – cast a pall over already-demoralized newsrooms, in part because they were not about anyone falling on their swords.

      Hiller had just signed off on 250 layoffs at the Los Angeles Times, but appears to have been tossed under the bus despite his willingness to do the dirty work. Lipinski, who has been handing out dozens of pink slips herself at the Chicago Tribune, reportedly made her own choice to leave. “This position is not the fit it once was,” she told staff.

      So where is all this heading? Does the brash Michaels have any vision of where he is taking the company – beyond bailing as fast as he can to stave off potential bankruptcy in the face of a $13-billion debt incurred by Sam Zell’s purchase last year?

      Considered a genius by his admirers and a madman by critics, Michaels is a former radio executive and shock jock (who reportedly resorted to farting on air and fake-pureeing a frog to boost ratings), who was handpicked to run the Tribune by its new owner Sam Zell.

      Like his boss, Michaels affects a profane, tough-guy style. He announced the arrival of the new regime to Newsday staff last January by saying, “The difference between then and now is we’re not having another meeting. . . . We’re Actually Fucking Doing It.”

      Zell, nicknamed the “grave dancer” for his knack for pulling value from dying businesses, has been a true believer in Michaels since buying a string of radio stations called Jacor Communications in 1993, then headed by Michaels.

      Michaels impressed Zell as an empire builder, riding the wave of government deregulation to make tons of money for Jacor and then, San Antonio-based Clear Channel Communications Inc. He took Jacor from 13 stations to 230 in five years, and helped engineer a merger with Clear Channel in 1999, according to a profile in Chicago Business. At Clear Channel, he led a strategy that made the company the biggest radio operator in history.

      But despite his financial success, Michaels “became the poster child for what people didn’t like about corporate radio,” Sean Ross of Edison Media Research told TVNewsday.

      Among his innovations was “voice tracking” in which ‘local’ radio shows were produced hundreds of miles away, eliminating the need for many jobs and homogenizing play lists across the nation.

      And then there were stories about his pranks, like the day he roamed the halls at Jacor wearing a rubber penis around his neck, accosting female employees, according to allegations aired on ABC’s “20/20,” by former Florida disc jockey Liz Richards who sued the company, including Michaels, for sex discrimination. Richards’ suit was settled out of court in 1995, and the terms were never disclosed.

      “Looking for classy radio programming?” wrote Eric Boehlert in a withering 2001 Salon profile. “Don’t look here. The company is known for allowing animals to be killed live on the air, severing longstanding ties with community and charity events, laying off thousands of workers, homogenizing play lists and a corporate culture in which dirty tricks are a way of life.”

      Michaels has always insisted such criticisms were unfair, attributing them to resistance to change in a rapidly consolidating industry.

      Regardless, the reception he got from Tribune employees earlier this year was hopeful in many quarters, especially when he seemed so emphatic that the solution to the industry’s woes was not further cost-cutting, but creating entirely new streams of revenue. “You think Amazon is worrying about selling ads? You think eBay is worried about selling ads?” he said in his remarks at Newsday. “In the interactive world, that’s the icing on the cake. Media companies have their head where it doesn’t smell good.”

      Except that it hasn’t worked out that way. However paltry those advertising revenues may have seemed then, they have nose-dived since. And with new income streams yet to materialize, the company’s steep debt payments began to seem more and more onerous.

      Despite Zell’s insistence that he planned to keep intact the company’s 11 newspapers and nearly two dozen television stations, the company sold off Newsday, one of its most profitable papers, borrowed $300 million against future earnings and began exploring the sale or lease of the landmark properties owned by the Chicago and Los Angeles papers.

      By June, Michaels was assuring worried investors: “We are actively pursuing a program to right-size our newspapers.”

      The definition of ‘right-sizing – was not spelled out.

      “Sounds better than ‘panicking,’” suggested media consultant Ken Doctor on his blog. “To describe the current round of staff cuts, though, there’s a better word: Frightsizing.”

      Another tip-off to the future was suggested earlier this week by Lipinski’s successor at the Chicago Tribune, Gerould W. Kern, who was the one who introduced metrics to measure reporters’ productivity. In an interview with his own paper, Kern said he planned to work closely with Los Angeles Times Editor Russ Stanton to see where resources could be shared.

      The scope of that sharing was not spelled out, but that too might signal a page out of Michael’s playbook at Clear Channel.

      “If Randy repeats what he’s done in radio, we’ll see a lot of newsrooms eliminated,” media consultant John Gorman told Chicago Business. Gorman, who remembered hearing a Clear channel DJ mispronounce the name of the Cleveland suburb from which he was purporting to broadcast, predicted a scenario in which local TV newscasts would be ‘video-tracked’ from a central studio to save money.

      To be fair, no one else has hit on the solution to print media’s declining fortunes either. Nor has anyone else beat their chest in quite the same way as Michaels or Zell.

      “The dearth of decent ideas designed to save newspapers – or reinvent them for the digital age in ways that preserve their crucial democratic functions – is curious and depressing,” wrote Eric Alterman in The Nation. “It’s curious because some of the smartest, most ambitious and most civic-minded people in America are deeply engaged with the problem. It is depressing because the only ones with the self-confidence to undertake radical measures appear to be completely off their respective rockers.”

      As Michaels himself promised Tribune employees in January: It’s going to be a wild ride.

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    • Chesapeake Energy and Aubrey McClendon, masters of the power play

      Chesapeake Energy CEO Aubrey McClendon has a former Oklahoma governor (Frank Keating) and U.S. senator (Don Nickles) on his Oklahoma City-based company’s board of directors. That seems only fitting. McClendon’s great uncle, Robert S. Kerr, co-founded Kerr-McGee and served as Oklahoma governor and senator.

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      These are boom times for Chesapeake, founded by McClendon – whose middle name is Kerr – and Tom Ward in 1989 with an initial investment of $50,000. The company went public in 1993. After some rough going, its stock price has increased fiftyfold since.

      Chesapeake is currently the nation’s third largest producer of natural gas, but McClendon predicts it will be No. 1 by the end of the year. He told shareholders at the company’s annual meeting last month that the Haynesville Shale field in Louisiana and Northeast Texas could be the company’s most significant field ever.

      “We are really off to the races in that play,” he said.

      Last week, the company announced a $3.3 billion joint venture with Plains Exploration & Production Co. that values Chesapeake’s holdings in the Haynesville region at $30,000 an acre, more than six times what it paid.

      The company is also the biggest player in the Barnett Shale region around Fort Worth, where it has employed actor Tommy Lee Jones to tout the benefits of natural gas in radio, TV, newspaper and billboard advertising.

      “The Barnett Shale is a national treasure that will benefit all Texans for generations,” the actor says in a TV spot.

      Not all residents agree.

      Star-Telegram columnist Mitch Schnurman points out that McClendon has a “history of funding aggressive public-opinion campaigns.” He supported the Swift Boat campaign against John Kerry, defended the Duke (his alma mater) lacrosse team against rape accusations and fought the construction of coal power plants in Texas.

      Coal is a cheaper fuel to use to generate electricity but natural gas is cleaner.

      Chesapeake’s main business strategy is to “grow through the drillbit,” meaning exactly what it says. The company claims to have the most active drilling program in the United States.

      Like Fort Worth-based XTO Energy, Cheasapeake also actively hedges its future production to provide some price certainty.

      As of May 1, according to Chesapeake’s Web site, the company had hedged more than 70% of its natural gas and oil production for the rest of this year, as well as 80% of gas production and 92% of oil production for 2009.

      McClendon also hedges his political bets. He has made campaign contributions to many presidential candidates this year, including Barack Obama and John McCain.

      At the annual meeting, McClendon said his company will continue to try to convince the U.S. Congress that Chesapeake is one of the energy good guys.

      “We are trying to produce more clean-burning, American-produced natural gas,” he said.

      Monday, Chesapeake said that Oklahoma State University President Burns Hargis would join the company’s board on Sept. 15. Tuesday, the company said it would issue 25 million additional shares of common stock.

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    • Ka-Pow! Thwap! Marvel faces ownership fight for Spider-Man and the Incredible Hulk

      Marvel Comics’ transformation from a bankrupt company with a dusty library of 5,000 superheroes in 1998 into a booming entertainment conglomerate that produced its first self-made movies this year was a real-life metamorphosis.

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      After last month’s release of “The Incredible Hulk,” a gushing story in Portfolio asked, “Is Marvel the next Magic Kingdom?”

      The Wall Street Journal trumpeted the $500-million-plus receipts from “The Iron Man,” starring Robert Downey Jr. as the first sign of “the company’s transition from a licenser of its comic-book superheroes to an independent film studio that can build its characters into full-fledged franchises.”

      Adding to the buzz was news of the first-ever Marvel Theme Park slated to open in 2011, a $1-billion project undertaken in Dubai in partnership with the Al Ahli Group, a developer in the United Arab Emirates.

      “Creating their own studio is the best idea Marvel has had since the creation of Spider-Man,” Jeff Bock of Exhibitor Relations, which tracks box office receipts, told Portfolio. “They have thousands of characters that fans would love to see on the big screen.”

      But just when everything seemed golden came a plot complication that seemed ripped from one of Marvel’s own comics.

      A three-time felon named Peter F. Paul, a former partner of Marvel creator Stan Lee, helped bring a lawsuit against the company, and a complaint with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, contending that a now-bankrupt company named Stan Lee Media, which Lee had co-owned with Paul, had co-ownership of Marvel characters like Spider-Man and the Incredible Hulk.

      Barron’s wrote about the 2007 lawsuit and complaint last week, predicting that a bitter legal fight could undermine investor confidence in the company regardless of its outcome. The price of Marvel stock began falling that very day – despite Marvel’s insistence that the claims were baseless.

      The story may have hit some Marvel investors hard since the company had made a spectacular comeback after years of poor performance and, then, bankruptcy, under financier Ronald Perelman. In 1998, the new controlling shareholder, Isaac Perlmutter, used bankruptcy procedures to end Marvel’s $1 million-a-year lifetime contract with Lee, who had spent more than 60 years at the company and who had helped create The Incredible Hulk, the X-Men and Spider-Man, among other characters.

      The abrogation of that contract was what freed Lee, in October, 1998, to start a new company, an Internet animation studio called Stan Lee Media, along with his then-friend Peter Paul. Paul put $500,000 into the new company, while Lee assigned it all his intellectual property rights. The new dot-com rode the bubble market for a while, then went bankrupt in 2001.

      The lawsuit and the SEC complaint, filed by self-described whistleblower James L. Nesfield (once a star witness for former New York Attorney General Eliot Spitzer) on behalf of the shareholders of Stan Lee Media, alleges that Marvel had agreed to sign over Lee’s ownership rights of his superhero characters to Stan Lee Media, but in fact, never did so.

      But Marvel spokesman Richard Land denied such an agreement and insisted Lee had no ownership rights.

      In written agreements, “Mr. Lee acknowledged and confirmed that all the work he did for Marvel from the beginning of his employment (in 1940) was as an employee,” Land said.

      “. . .Since he never owned them, he could never have transferred them to anybody. Mr. Lee himself has always acknowledged that the Marvel characters belong and always belonged to Marvel.”

      Lee, now 85, has written shareholders of Stan Lee Media that Paul is behind the lawsuit and SEC filing, and blamed him for the bankruptcy of Stan Lee Media. He has also made statements concurring with Marvel’s ”work for hire” characterization of his work.

      The complaint was brought after Paul was extradited back to this country from Brazil, and he now awaits sentencing on his most-recent felony conviction for the manipulation of Stan Lee Media’s stock. He has two prior felony convictions, one for attempting to sell Cuba $8.75 million worth of coffee that never existed, and a second for cocaine possession.

      “His history speaks for itself,” Land said of Paul.

      Not everyone is convinced the suit lacks merit, however.

      In his story for Barron’s, Alpert contends that documents attached to Marvel’s filings with the SEC “show contradictory assignments by Stan Lee of his rights to all these characters.”

      Alpert notes that in 2002, after Stan Lee Media went bankrupt, Lee sued Marvel Entertainment on a previously undisclosed contract.

      “It turned out that in November 1998 . . .Lee had gone to Marvel claiming half-ownership of Spider-Man, the X-Men and other characters, since Marvel had cancelled his previous rights assignment in its bankruptcy,” according to Alpert. That claim was made a month after he had signed over his intellectual property rights to Stan Lee Media.

      “Lee got a new contract for up to $1 million in annual salary and 10% of movie and TV profits, assigning Marvel his rights in those characters,” Alpert wrote. “So, come 2002, Spider-Man: The Movie had grossed more than $1 billion and Lee invoked that contract and sued. Their 2005 settlement was sealed, but Marvel later reported a $10 million charge for it.”

      At the very least, the case will surely bring forth a crop of superhero lawyers.

    • Discount retailer Steve & Barry’s looks for ways to stay afloat

      For years, Steve & Barry’s, a store where people could buy T-shirts and even designer dresses by Sarah Jessica Parker for less than $10, was seen as an example of “extreme retailing” that worked.

      Now it appears that the company’s form of retailing may have been too extreme.

      The Wall Street Journal reported Tuesday that the company may shut more than 100 or its 275 stores and that it is looking for millions of dollars in financing to avoid declaring bankruptcy.

      “Everything is on the table. Anything can happen,” a source told the Journal. The company declined comment.

      Started in 1985 at the University of Pennsylvania by childhood friends Steve Shore and Barry Prevor, Steve & Barry’s grew first on or near college campuses.

      It specialized in university logo T-shirts, selling them for under $10.

      Eventually, the company moved away from the campuses and into struggling malls, often getting paid a fee up front by the mall’s owners.

      The mall fees have become essential to the company’s profits, the Journal reported in an earlier story, in a sense requiring the company to keep expanding and going into new stores to stay afloat.

      Steve & Barry’s eventually expanded its merchandise beyond T-shirts. But it continued to spend very little on advertising, just as it continued to focus on getting the lowest tariffs on its clothing made in other countries.

      By changing the content of goods slightly – adding waterproof materials, for example – the firm achieved significantly lower tariffs and even improved the product.

      “To be great, you have to have these ridiculous, insane prices and not sacrifice quality,” Shore told The New York Times earlier this year. “The question we constantly ask ourselves is how to hit the price point that even Wal-Mart is not hitting.”

      During the last two years, the company has also attracted customers by offering celebrity designed apparel.

      This marketing effort began in 2006 when Steve & Barry’s introduced Starburys, basketball shoes endorsed by Stephon Marbury, a basketball star now with the New York Knicks.

      Originally the shoes sold for $14.98, a price far below those sold by other companies and endorsed by other players. The shoes now are going for under $9.

      Other celebrities now in agreements with Steve & Barry’s include tennis great Venus Williams, actress Amanda Bynes and Parker, the star of the television and movie versions of Sex and the City, who created a line called Bitten for the company.

      “I had never heard of Steve & Barry’s, and I didn’t know anyone who had ever heard of them,” Parker told the Times. “I was dubious. But I loved their manifesto and the idea of the marketization of fashion.”

      The fate of Steve & Barry’s is uncertain at this point, the Journal reports. It has hired a bankruptcy counsel, the law firm of Weil Gotshal & Manges LLP.

      The company is also seeking investors.