Case Study · Take-Private Deal · December 2024

Nordstrom's $6.25B family-led buyout (December 23, 2024): going private 50.1%/49.9% with Mexico's El Puerto de Liverpool

On December 23, 2024, Nordstrom Inc. (NYSE: JWN) announced a definitive agreement to be taken private by Erik Nordstrom, Pete Nordstrom, Jamie Nordstrom, other Nordstrom family members, and Mexican retailer El Puerto de Liverpool, in an all-cash deal valued at approximately $6.25 billion. Nordstrom common shareholders would receive $24.25 in cash per share — a 42% premium to the company's unaffected closing stock price on April 11, 2024 (the day before media reports first surfaced about a potential family-led take-private bid). Under the announced structure, the Nordstrom family would hold 50.1% ownership of the resulting private company and Liverpool would hold 49.9%. The transaction required approval by two-thirds of Nordstrom common stockholders, and the deal was expected to close in early 2025. The arrangement returns the 123-year-old company to family-majority ownership while bringing in Liverpool — Mexico's largest department-store operator — as a strategic minority partner.

TL;DR — the quick read
  • Story: On December 23, 2024, Nordstrom Inc. (NYSE: JWN) announced a definitive agreement to be taken private by Erik Nordstrom, Pete Nordstrom, Jamie Nordstrom, other Nordstrom family members, and Mexican retailer El Puerto de Liverpool, in an all-cash deal valued at approximately $6.25 billion. Nordstrom common shareholders would receive $24.25 in cash per share — a 42% premium to the company's unaffected closing stock price on April 11, 2024 (the day before media reports first surfaced about a potential family-led take-private bid).
  • Why it matters: Under the announced structure, the Nordstrom family would hold 50.1% ownership of the resulting private company and Liverpool would hold 49.9%. The near-50/50 split intentionally keeps the family in formal majority control while giving Liverpool — Mexico's largest department-store operator — substantial economic exposure and governance influence.
  • Takeaway: El Puerto de Liverpool had previously accumulated a Nordstrom stake through open-market purchases before the take-private discussions, so the partnership structure aligned with an existing investor position.
  • Takeaway: The 42% premium to unaffected price (April 11, 2024) is the structural basis for the shareholder-vote argument that the deal value exceeds standalone public-market alternatives.
  • Takeaway: Going private removes the quarterly earnings-cycle constraint and allows multi-year investments in Nordstrom Rack growth, technology, and store renovation that public-market investors had not been rewarding.
STAR framework

Nordstrom's December 2024 take-private

S
Situation
Nordstrom's stock had not been rewarding multi-year investments
Public-market investors had not been rewarding Nordstrom's ongoing investment programs — particularly Nordstrom Rack growth and store renovations. Family-leadership had been exploring take-private alternatives for at least nine months before the announcement.
T
Task
Take Nordstrom private with capital and structural support, but not at private-equity terms
The family wanted a partner with retail-operating capability and aligned long-term horizons — without exposing the company to private-equity ownership that might prioritize short-term value extraction.
A
Action
Partner with Liverpool (Mexico's largest department-store operator)
December 23, 2024: $6.25B all-cash deal announced. Family + Liverpool buyer group. Per-share price $24.25. Premium 42% over the April 11, 2024 unaffected close. Family-Liverpool ownership split 50.1% / 49.9%.
R
Result
Two-thirds shareholder approval required; closing expected early 2025
The deal returns Nordstrom to family-majority control while bringing in Liverpool as a strategic partner with deep retail-operating expertise. Going private removes quarterly earnings-cycle pressure and allows multi-year investments without market-pricing constraints.
By the Numbers

Nordstrom family buyout

$0B
Deal value
All-cash equity value
Source: Nordstrom press release
$0
Per-share price
All-cash
Source: Nordstrom press release
0%
Premium to unaffected price
vs April 11, 2024 close
Source: Nordstrom press release
0%
Nordstrom family ownership
Liverpool: 49.9%
Source: Nordstrom press release
Dec 0
Announcement date
2024; close expected early 2025
Source: Nordstrom press release
0/3
Shareholder approval required
Two-thirds of common stockholders
Source: Deal terms

Quick facts

CompanyNordstrom Inc. (NYSE: JWN before take-private; now privately held)
Deal announcementDecember 23, 2024
Total deal valueApproximately $6.25 billion (all cash)
Per-share price$24.25 in cash
Premium42% over Nordstrom's unaffected closing stock price on April 11, 2024
Buyer sideErik Nordstrom, Pete Nordstrom, Jamie Nordstrom, other Nordstrom family members, and El Puerto de Liverpool (Mexico)
Ownership splitNordstrom family: 50.1%; El Puerto de Liverpool: 49.9%
Shareholder approval requirementTwo-thirds of common stockholders
Expected closeEarly 2025
El Puerto de Liverpool's roleMexican department-store retailer with previous Nordstrom investment via open-market stock purchases
Founded1901 by Johan W. Nordstrom in Seattle as a shoe store
Pre-deal CEOErik B. Nordstrom (the family member directly leading the buyout)
Honest note
Specific Nordstrom revenue and operating performance figures cited in earlier drafts have been removed pending verification against Nordstrom's most recent SEC filings before the take-private. The deal was announced December 23, 2024 and expected to close in early 2025 — readers researching post-close status should consult Nordstrom's most recent regulatory filings (the merger close itself would be disclosed via 8-K filing). El Puerto de Liverpool's exact prior stake in Nordstrom before the deal, and specifics of the family-Liverpool partnership structure (including which family members are providing financing vs. equity rollover), should be referenced from primary SEC filings or proxy materials before being quoted.

The December 23, 2024 take-private announcement

Nordstrom announced on December 23, 2024 that it had entered into a definitive agreement to be acquired by Erik Nordstrom, Pete Nordstrom, Jamie Nordstrom, other members of the Nordstrom family, and Mexican department-store retailer El Puerto de Liverpool. The deal valued Nordstrom's equity at approximately $6.25 billion. Nordstrom common shareholders would receive $24.25 in cash per share — a 42% premium to the company's closing stock price on April 11, 2024 (the unaffected reference point, which is the day before media reports first surfaced about a potential family-led take-private effort). The deal requires approval by two-thirds of Nordstrom common shareholders. Expected close was early 2025.

The 50.1/49.9 family-Liverpool structure

The structure of the deal is intentionally split very close to 50/50 between the Nordstrom family and El Puerto de Liverpool. Family ownership is 50.1% — majority by a single share — while Liverpool holds 49.9%. This near-parity structure means both partners have substantial economic exposure to the outcome and substantial governance influence, but the family retains technical majority for control purposes. El Puerto de Liverpool, Mexico's largest department-store operator, had previously accumulated a meaningful Nordstrom stake through open-market purchases before the take-private discussions, so the partnership structure aligns the existing Liverpool position with the family's control objectives.

Why take Nordstrom private now?

Nordstrom's strategic context in late 2024 reflected several pressures common to traditional department-store operators: the structural decline of mall-anchored department stores, persistent margin compression from competition with online and off-price retailers, and the company's substantial investment in its off-price Nordstrom Rack format as an alternative growth vector. Public-market valuation had not rewarded the company's ongoing investment programs, and the family had been exploring take-private alternatives for at least nine months before the announcement. The Liverpool partnership provides both capital and an aligned strategic investor with deep retail operating experience — without exposing the company to private equity ownership that might prioritize short-term value extraction.

What take-private means for Nordstrom's strategy

Going private removes Nordstrom from quarterly earnings-cycle pressure and allows the family to execute multi-year investments without market-pricing constraints. The Liverpool partnership is structurally significant: Liverpool runs Mexico's largest department-store chain (Liverpool and Suburbia), and the operational expertise it brings — particularly in Mexican-customer retail and Latin American expansion potential — gives Nordstrom strategic options that pure US-focused ownership would not. The take-private structure also reduces public-disclosure burden, which the company can use to invest more aggressively in things like Rack growth, technology platforms, and store renovation without quarter-by-quarter justification. The structural risk is the standard one for take-private transitions: family-and-strategic-investor partnerships need clearly-defined exit or successor structures to avoid becoming permanent capital traps.

Frequently asked questions

How much is the Nordstrom buyout worth?

Approximately $6.25 billion in equity value, paid as $24.25 per share in cash. The premium was 42% over Nordstrom's stock price on April 11, 2024 (the unaffected reference point — the day before media reports first surfaced about a take-private effort). The deal requires approval by two-thirds of Nordstrom common shareholders.

Who is El Puerto de Liverpool and why are they part of this?

El Puerto de Liverpool is Mexico's largest department-store operator (Liverpool and Suburbia chains). It had previously accumulated a meaningful Nordstrom stake through open-market purchases prior to the take-private discussions. As part of the announced deal structure, Liverpool will hold 49.9% of the resulting private company while the Nordstrom family holds 50.1%. The partnership provides Nordstrom with both capital and deep retail-operating expertise, particularly relevant for any future Latin American or Mexican-customer-focused growth.

Why did the Nordstrom family want to go private?

Public-market investors had not rewarded Nordstrom's ongoing strategic investment programs, particularly in Nordstrom Rack growth and store renovations. Going private removes quarterly earnings-cycle pressure and allows multi-year investments without market-pricing constraints. The family had been exploring take-private alternatives for at least nine months before the announcement. The structure — family-plus-strategic-investor rather than family-plus-private-equity — was designed to avoid the short-term value extraction risks associated with private-equity ownership.

When will the deal close?

Nordstrom and the buyer group expected closing in early 2025, subject to two-thirds approval by common shareholders and customary regulatory and closing conditions. Readers researching the actual close should consult Nordstrom's most recent SEC filings (a take-private close is announced via 8-K).

Will Nordstrom Rack continue?

There's no indication from the deal announcement that Nordstrom Rack will be unwound. If anything, the take-private structure was rationalized partly around giving Nordstrom Rack more strategic room to invest and grow — Rack has been an increasingly important part of Nordstrom's overall portfolio and the public markets had not been rewarding the investment program adequately. Take-private status gives the family-Liverpool partnership more flexibility to continue Rack growth.

Sources & references

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