Bankruptcy @ Circuit City

Year

                 Circuit City Events

1949 Samuel S. Wurtzel opens first Wards Company retail store in Richmond, Va.
1959 Wards operates four television and home appliance stores in Richmond with annual sales volume of about $1 million.
1960 Expands operations via licensed departments in mass merchandising discount stores.
1961 Makes first public offering with Stein Brothers & Boyce Co. of Baltimore. Offers 110,000 shares at $5.375 per share (split adjusted, 2 cents per share).
1966 Sales reach $23 million for the fiscal year.
1968 Moves from the over-the-counter market to the American Stock Exchange. Offers 1,700 shares at $19.75 per share (split adjusted, 55 cents per share).
1969-1982 Company acquires numerous electronics retailers and operates stores from New York to California.
1983 Sales reach $246 million for the fiscal year.
1984 Company name changes to Circuit City Stores Inc.; Stock listed on the New York Stock Exchange.
1987 Sales reach the $1 billion mark for the fiscal year ending Feb. 28, 1987.
1989 First personal computers hit Circuit City store shelves.
1990 Sales reach the $2 billion mark for the fiscal year ending Feb. 28, 1990.
1993 Begins testing CarMax, a retail venture selling used vehicles.
1996 CarMax announces plans for national expansion of the concept.
1999 Circuit City launches Web site to offer online shopping; annual sales for Circuit City store businesses exceed $10 billion and annual sales for the CarMax superstores exceed $2 billion.
2000 Circuit City exits the appliance business.
2002 Circuit City completes the separation of CarMax.
2003 The company rejects takeover bid from Mexican financier Carlos Slim Helu.
2004 Circuit City acquires Ontario-based InterTAN Inc., a consumer electronics retailer of private-label and internationally branded products.
2005 Company rejects unsolicited $3.25 billion cash buyout offer from Boston investment firm Highfields Capital Management LP.
2006 Circuit City launches Firedog, a PC services and home-installation business.
2007 Circuit City announces plans to explore strategic alternatives for InterTAN Inc.; launches new store prototype “The City.”
Apr-08 Dallas-based movie-rental chain Blockbuster Inc. makes public a more than $1 billion takeover bid for Circuit City with dreams of creating a huge chain that would sell electronic gadgets and rent movies and games.
May-08 Circuit City’s board of directors authorizes the exploration of strategic alternatives to enhance shareholder value; Opens books to Blockbuster.
Jun-08 Circuit City reaches agreement with shareholder Wattles Capital Management to nominate three directors, including James A. Marcum to its board to defuse proxy battle.
Jul-08 Blockbuster withdraws takeover bid, citing market conditions.
Aug-08 Marcum named vice chairman.
Sept. 22, 2008 Philip J. Schoonover steps down as Circuit City’s chief executive, chairman and president; Marcum named as interim president and chief executive.
Sept. 29, 2008 Circuit City withdraws its outlook for the full year and posts a wider second-quarter loss as sales fell 10 percent; Shares fall more than 20 percent.
Nov. 3, 2008 Circuit City says it will close 155 stores in 55 U.S. markets by Dec. 31, laying off about 17 percent of its domestic work force. Company says it will further reduce new store openings and plans to work with landlords to renegotiate leases, lower rent or terminate agreements while it deals with tightening credit from its vendors.
Nov. 10, 2008 Circuit City files for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection

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