By Jessica DiNapoli
(Reuters) – Dick’s Sporting Goods Inc Dick’s shares jumped as much as 6 percent after Reuters first reported the development earlier, which ensures Dick’s will no longer be competing against the Sports Authority brand. Dick’s shares closed up 4.1 percent at $45.06. Dick’s and Sports Authority still have to finalize paper work on the deal, and a U.S. bankruptcy court judge has to approve it, the company said in a regulatory filing. The bankruptcy court’s hearing to consider approval of the deal is scheduled for July 15. The intellectual property of Sports Authority includes its e-commerce website, SportsAuthority.com, a loyalty program with 28.5 million members, and a list consisting of 114 million customer files, according to an advertisement for the intellectual property auction. Sports Direct International Plc Dick’s said it also plans to take over the leases for 31 Sports Authority stores for an additional $8 million.
Other big box retailers scooped up Sports Authority leases. Best Buy Co Inc The naming rights to a football stadium in Denver, Colorado, home of the National Football League’s Denver Broncos, are still up for grabs.
Sports Authority, with 464 stores across the United States, had been a formidable competitor to Dick’s. But the retailer struggled with a heavy debt load and competition from online giant Amazon.com Inc Dick’s could create an off-price chain under the Sports Authority brand, said Matt Powell, a sports industry analyst at the NPD Group. Discount is a growing sector in retail, he said.
Sports Authority held a bankruptcy auction for its assets on Wednesday, and the process wrapped up early Thursday morning, the people said.
It filed for bankruptcy in March.
(Reporting by Jessica DiNapoli in New York; Additional reporting by Tom Hals in Wilmington, Del.; Editing by Jeffrey Benkoe, Bernard Orr)