Top Lazard restructuring banker Kurtz departs for Hilco

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The logo and trading information for Lazard Ltd appear on a screen on the floor at theNYSE in New York

The logo and trading information for Lazard Ltd appear on a screen on the floor at the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) in New York, U.S., April 24, 2019. REUTERS/Brendan McDermid/File Photo

NEW YORK, Aug 8 (Reuters) – David Kurtz, Lazard Ltd’s (LAZ.N) global head of restructuring, has agreed to join Hilco Global, the financial advisory firm that helps failing retailers liquidate told Reuters.

Kurtz, who has advised on some of the highest-profile corporate bankruptcies of the past two decades, will join Hilco as a vice chairman and chief strategic officer in September. He will report to Chief Executive and founder Jeffrey Hecktman.

Lazard last week promoted Tyler Cowan to take Kurtz’s place leading the investment bank’s restructuring practice in September.

Kurtz advised retailers J.C. Penney, Neiman Marcus and J. Crew on how to navigate bankruptcy proceedings and survive a global pandemic that put some peers out of business. He has also helped companies in the offshore drilling industry such as Valaris and Transocean restructure in and outside of bankruptcy.

Before joining Lazard 21 years ago, Kurtz was a bankruptcy lawyer at Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher & Flom.

At Hilco, Kurtz will help to continue expanding the diversified firm, which started in Chicago and has grown to more than 20 specialized businesses with 800-plus employees around the world.

Hilco started in 1986 valuing inventories that included industrial equipment and running going-out-of-business sales for retailers. It has expanded into lending, asset appraisals and large projects rehabilitating industrial properties, such as a former steel plant in Baltimore and oil refinery in Philadelphia. It also licenses and resuscitates iconic brands that have fallen on hard times such as Polaroid and provides consulting services to companies.

Reporting by Mike Spector in New York; Editing by Richard Chang

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

Mike Spector is a correspondent at Reuters covering corporate crises that span bankruptcy, mass tort litigation and government investigations. He was the first to expose Johnson and Johnson’s plan to offload into bankruptcy lawsuits alleging its iconic Baby Powder caused cancer. He later revealed in an investigative series how J&J and other businesses and nonprofits use the bankruptcy system to escape liability for lawsuits over deadly products and sexual abuse while avoiding filing for Chapter 11 themselves. Mike has also contributed to an award-winning Reuters series on pervasive secrecy in American courts that covers up evidence of deadly products. Mike previously worked at The Wall Street Journal, where he covered bankruptcy and private equity on the paper’s mergers and acquisitions team, and also the automotive industry. He has been part of award-winning teams that covered the government-brokered rescue and bankruptcy of General Motors; insider trading and related bankruptcy debt-trading issues; and emerging concerns with Tesla’s self-driving car technology. He has a master’s degree from Columbia University’s journalism school and an undergraduate degree from Johns Hopkins University.

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