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Honored Contributor
Posts: 10,746
Registered: ‎01-19-2015

Retail Bankruptcies Are At an All-Time High

[ Edited ]

According to this article in Business Insider, retail bankruptcies hit an all-time high in the first quarter of the year. Sears, J.Crew and Neiman Marcus are among the companies that could be the next to default. The article gives a list of the 18 most at-risk retailers.

 

Here's the article:

 


"Sears, J.Crew, and Neiman Marcus are among the companies that could be next to default, according to S&P Global Ratings.

 

Retail bankruptcies hit an all-time high in the first quarter of the year, soaring past last year's records, according to Moody's Investor's Service."

 

by Hayley Peterson

 

The fallout is far from over, however, with many more defaults expected for the remainder of 2018.

 

"We believe defaults in 2018 could match or exceed last year's record level," S&P Global Ratings analyst Robert Shulz wrote in a report that identified 20 retailers at risk of defaulting. Since publishing the report last month, two of the companies identified — the jewelry retailer Claire's and grocery chain Bi-Lo— have filed for bankruptcy.

 

The pace of retail liquidations could also pick up this year, Shulz wrote.

"Despite store closures amid the turmoil, the US remains significantly oversaturated with retail stores," he wrote. "Some retailers have made progress towards better aligning their physical footprint to the new reality of physical versus virtual sales, but there is still excess capacity."

 

Toys R Us recently began liquidating its US business. The company has shut down its Toys R Us and Babies R Us websites, and it's now holding going-out-of-business sales at its more than 700 US stores.

 

Sears, J.Crew, and Neiman Marcus are among the companies that could be next to default, according to S&P Global Markets.

 

Here's the full list of the most at-risk retailers:


99 Cents Only Stores LLC
99 Cents Only is a discount chain with a primary price point of around $1. It has more than 350 locations in California, Texas, Arizona, and Nevada.

 

Bluestem Brands
Bluestem Brands owns 13 e-commerce sites including Appleseed's, Bedford Fair, Fingerhut, Draper's & Damon's, Blair, and Gettington.com.

 

Everest Holdings
Everest Holdings LLC operates debt-laden Eddie Bauer, which has more than 300 stores in the US and Canada.

 

FullBeauty Brands Holdings Corp
FullBeauty owns a handful of clothing brands for plus-size men and women including fullbeauty.com, Woman Within, Roaman's, Jessica London, ellos, KingSize, and Brylane Home.

 

J.Crew Group, Inc.
J.Crew has been closing stores following years of plunging sales.

The company recently axed its bridal business and parted ways with its longtime CEO Mickey Drexler, as well as its creative director Jenna Lyons.

In an interview with The Wall Street Journal, Drexler said the retailer's biggest mistake over the last several years is that it jacked up its prices at a time when customers were increasingly cost-conscious.

 

New Academy Holding Co. LLC
New Academy is the indirect parent company of the discount chain Academy Sports & Outdoors, which has more than 240 locations.

 

PetSmart Inc.
PetSmart has more than 1,500 pet stores in the US, Canada, and Puerto Rico.

 

Steak 'n Shake Inc.
The 84-year-old fast-food chain Steak 'n Shake has more than 500 locations, primarily in the Midwest and South US.

 

SSH Holdings
SSH Holdings operates the mall-based Spencer's and Spirit stores.

 

David's Bridal, Inc.
David's Bridal is suffering from falling sales as a growing number of brides opt for casual wedding dresses over traditional gowns.

 

Neiman Marcus Group
The department-store chain Neiman Marcus is struggling with a $5 billion debt load after two leveraged buyouts.

 

Evergreen AcqCo 1 LP
Evergreen AcqCo 1 LP operates the the thrift-store chains Value Village and Savers, which sell used clothing, accessories, and household goods online and in stores.

 

HT Intermediate Holdings Corp.
HT Intermediate Holdings Corp. is the indirect parent company of the mall-based chain Hot Topic.

 

Payless
Payless filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection last year and emerged just four months later after a successful reorganization. But the chain, which has about 3,500 stores, is still in danger of defaulting, according to S&P Capital Markets.

 

BKH Acquisition Corp.
BKH Acquisition Corp. operates more than 100 Burger King restaurants in Puerto Rico through its subsidiary, Caribbean Restaurants.

 

The Fresh Market
The Fresh Market has 176 grocery stores in 24 states across the US. The supermarket chain cut prices last year in an attempt to drive shopper traffic to its stores, but its efforts reportedly failed.

 

Guitar Center
The music-store chain Guitar Center has suffered in part from an industry-wide dropoff in electric guitar sales. Electric guitar sales have declined from 1.5 million sold annually to about one million in the last decade, according to the Washington Post.

 

Sears Holdings
Sears, which also owns Kmart, has been selling off brands and real estate to stay afloat amid years of falling sales. The company's sales have dropped from $53 billion in 2006 to $16.7 billion in 2017.

 

~~Be careful when you follow the masses. Sometimes the 'm' is silent.~~
Super Contributor
Posts: 374
Registered: ‎07-17-2010

Re: Retail Bankruptcies Are at All-Time High

wow this is a shocker. Thank you.

 

Respected Contributor
Posts: 3,562
Registered: ‎03-12-2010

Re: Retail Bankruptcies Are at All-Time High

Thousands of employees lose their jobs when these stores close.  In addition, businesses that remain open are firing as many full-time employees as they can so the corporations no longer have to pay benefits.  I know this firsthand.

Respected Contributor
Posts: 3,327
Registered: ‎05-09-2016

Re: Retail Bankruptcies Are at All-Time High

The only one on this list that truly suprises me is Fresh Market. The store near me in Florida is ALWAYS busy. Their prices are on the higher side, but for me, the quality is well worth it. Certainly, one store is not indicative of the entire chain, but it's surprising anyway. 

~The more someone needs to brag about how wonderful, special, successful, wealthy or important they are, the greater the likelihood that it isn't true. ~

Esteemed Contributor
Posts: 5,337
Registered: ‎01-09-2011

Re: Retail Bankruptcies Are at All-Time High

[ Edited ]

I am not shocked at all. I truly gave up shopping big box stores and department stores a long time ago.

 

Reasons: 

No one there to help, If they are there they are not trained. 

No stock available or they cannot keep shelves stocked.

Clothing stock that is available is dirty or clearly tried on too many times etc.

Gas prices and the cost of my time.

Uninteresting merchandise.

Fitting room lighting, rather try on at home.

 

And that is just a short list.

I still go to Target or Walgreen's, but for very specific things.

 

This all didn't happen overnight either, it was years in the making, Have to admit I have become a successful on-line shopper! It all comes right to my house. 

 

As far as restaurants go, two of my favorites I no longer go to because of lack of service. Simple as that. If you want my cash, I want something in return.

"Cats are poetry in motion. Dogs are gibberish in neutral." -Garfield
Honored Contributor
Posts: 25,929
Registered: ‎03-09-2010

Re: Retail Bankruptcies Are at All-Time High

Often businesses go bankrupt (or chapter 11) to reset their debt - but then come back strong. I don't think bankrupt in a business is always the same as for a person.

I do believe that our country is going to experience another big depression like 2008 very soon.

Trusted Contributor
Posts: 1,325
Registered: ‎03-10-2010

Re: Retail Bankruptcies Are at All-Time High

@handygal2

Very interesting... I wonder how much the CEO’s & others at the top are making in salaries & benefits. It’s hard for companies to absorb multi-million dollar salaries & benefits. Remember the “golden parachutes” a few years back. It seems the few at the top just care about getting as much as they can for themselves & then file bankruptcy.

 

Do they ever go after them personally? If they approve a multimillion $ bonus for themselves isn’t that like bouncing a check? Taking money you know you don’t have? Seems like they should have to pay it back & be personally responsible for some of the company’s debt. 

Honored Contributor
Posts: 9,305
Registered: ‎06-08-2016

Re: Retail Bankruptcies Are at All-Time High

Retail is going through some deep changes.    Bankruptcy can mean many things, not always going out of business.    

 

Many factors contribute to bankruptcy, wonder if we could see a comparison between retail and other industries.    I think restaurants are going through similar changes.

 

You can adjust to a new business climate or file for bankruptcy.   As long as there are bankruptcy laws, there will be bankruptcies.

 

And it's not just about consumers, it could be tax laws and other factors that send a company into bankruptcy.

Respected Contributor
Posts: 3,793
Registered: ‎03-13-2010

Re: Retail Bankruptcies Are at All-Time High


@Jacie wrote:

I am not shocked at all. I truly gave up shopping big box stores and department stores a long time ago.

 Reasons: 


"Uninteresting merchandise."

======================================

 

 

Last year when I got a PT job, I needed some "professional" looking clothes immediately.@  I was so disappointed and shocked when I saw how bad the clothes were @ Macy's - cheap "made in china" junk, loose buttons, hanging threads,  mismatched sizing, etc. - very poor quality ...  just bad!
Yesterday I took a sewing (machine) class at a fabric store because I had decided I'd have to start  making my clothes.  I was suprised at how many people were at the mall.
I haven't been "mall-shopping" in years.
"The less you respond to negative people, the more peaceful your life will become."
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Honored Contributor
Posts: 11,084
Registered: ‎03-21-2010

Re: Retail Bankruptcies Are at All-Time High

[ Edited ]

I never buy at Macy.  Our mall store is always in a disarray.  Very few shoppers.  I cut through Macy to get to Nordstrom....where I spend my moneyy.

 

Nordstrom is opening stores while other departmet stores are selling off.  Go figure....