The story of Best Buy Co. founder Richard Schulze trying to regain control of the company has ended, and for management it's a good ending.
It means the end of negotiations and due diligence meetings and conference calls with investment bankers. The way is now cleared to turn around the business.
For Schulze, who as it turned out did not come that close to presenting a good option, it means he can either join the board of directors and help or he can sit it out. That's up to him. Either way, Best Buy is moving forward.
Schulze let a deadline pass on Thursday without making a proposal to acquire the company in a going-private transaction, and it's now clear that it has been a while since that was even his primary objective. His energy over the recent past has reportedly gone into bringing up to three prominent private equity firms into Best Buy as financial partners.
When Best Buy CEO Hubert Joly called the still officially unnamed firms "impressive" on Friday's conference call with Best Buy investors, he is not exaggerating. The firms are reportedly Cerberus Capital Management, TPG Capital and Leonard Green & Partners. These are top-shelf firms, with deep and capable leadership teams and lots of capital. The proposals were said to be for cash investments of between $400 million and $700 million, and a board seat for each firm that invested.
The case Schulze made for financial partners in an amended filing Friday with the Securities and Exchange Commission seemed to be more about getting their representatives into Best Buy's boardroom than their capital, as "Mr. Schulze believed that the private equity firms would add significant expertise, talent and experience to the company's board of directors, which would assist the company in returning to its position of market leadership."
The Best Buy directors rejected those proposals from the private equity firms. They did so because it is difficult to imagine a single good reason for accepting them.
Remember, this was all Schulze's idea. Best Buy may have many challenges remaining before it, but raising capital isn't one of them.