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Harry Who ??!!
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We're off again... more windscreen shots.
Your guess is as good as mine !
Rock
Walk and Guitar Center.
The article
below is from the day we were there.
Guitar Center picked for sale
A private equity firm will pay $2.1 billion
to acquire the company.
By Leslie Earnest, Times Staff Writer
June 28, 2007
Guitar Center Inc., which opened its first
store in Hollywood almost half a century ago and expanded to
become the largest purveyor of musical instruments in the
U.S., is being acquired for $2.1 billion.
Bain Capital Partners, a Boston-based private equity firm that
holds major stakes in a range of companies including Warner
Music Group Corp., Toys R Us Inc. and Burger King Holdings
Inc., is expected to take Guitar Center private if the
acquisition goes through as planned by the end of the year.
Stockholders would be paid $63 for each share, a 26% bump over
Tuesday's closing price. That struck a chord with investors,
who pushed the stock up almost 20%, or $9.92, to $59.98 on
Wednesday.
After rising every year from 2000 through 2004, Guitar
Center's stock stalled and then fell — 5% in 2005 and 9% in
2006 — and was mostly treading water this year until buyout
rumors drove the shares higher in late May.
Jose Negrete, a student, wasn't as upbeat as investors about
the deal. The Anaheim resident worried that the new owners
would make changes. Right now, Guitar Center stores are
"musician-friendly" and let customers try out the
instruments, said Negrete, 31.
"They don't want you to break it necessarily, but they
don't mind if you jam on the guitar or do a little drum
solo."
Going private could make it easier for Guitar Center to
achieve its goal of expanding beyond the U.S., where it
operates more than 210 Guitar Center stores, said Joan Storms,
an analyst at Wedbush Morgan Securities in Los Angeles.
"They could probably achieve their investment strategy
sooner and more efficiently in the private marketplace,"
Storms said. "In the public marketplace, they would have
to meet investors' expectations on a quarterly basis."
The new owners may opt to close some stores, she said, adding
that Guitar Center may be experiencing some
"cannibalization" of sales because it has so many
shops.
That would be a bummer as far as Negrete is concerned. He said
downsizing "would totally suck" and be detrimental
to "up-and-coming musicians, especially young kids."
The retailer, which had revenue of $2.03 billion last year,
sells guitars, amplifiers, drums and keyboards and relies
heavily on sales to professional musicians. It also operates
more than 95 Music & Arts stores, which sell and rent band
instruments. Its Musician's Friend Inc. unit sells musical
instruments via catalogs and websites.
After the deal was announced Wednesday, analyst Gary Balter,
with Credit Suisse First Boston, sent a note to clients saying
that he suspected the new owners might sell Music & Arts.
Neither Music & Arts nor Musician's Friend offer the
promise of the core business, he said.
Bain Capital plans to continue to work with Guitar Center's
management team to build the business, said Jordan Hitch, a
managing director at the private equity firm.
After a strong sales streak, guitar sales fell off last year,
leaving some in the industry to wonder what went wrong. Storms
said some recent music trends were changing.
"Basically, the guitar business is driven by rock 'n'
roll music trends. The current music style tends to be more
almost technology-driven," she said. "It's not a
driver of guitar sales."
Guitar Center's roots stretch to 1959, when former accordion
and car salesman Wayne Mitchell bought a small appliance and
organ store in Hollywood. In 1964, one of Mitchell's suppliers
started producing Vox amplifiers and told Mitchell he would
have to sell some amplifiers if he wanted to keep selling
organs. So Mitchell converted a movie theater and stocked it
with Vox amps, giving birth to Guitar Center.
A second store opened in 1972 and became a magnet for local
musicians, the company's website says. Chief Executive Marty
Albertson began working for the budding chain in 1979.
The flagship Guitar Center store on Sunset Boulevard in
Hollywood became a tourist attraction with its "Rock
Walk" enshrining the handprints of famous musicians. By
the 1990s, the website says, it had claimed the title as the
"largest musical instrument retailer in the world."
It went public in 1997.
The deal with Bain Capital marks the culmination of an auction
led by Goldman Sachs & Co. to solicit buyers for the
retailer.
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Chateau
Marmont Hotel.
Miyagi's
on Sunset
Carney's
Express Diner.
Snapped
this because I liked the VW Beetle with its propeller hat.
This was my second shot... as I took the first one, that man
standing
at the kerb spat in the gutter.
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