Mervyns woes may aid rivals, off-price chains
Written on August 3, 2008
U.S. retailer Mervyn’s LLC recent bankruptcy filing could signal stormy times ahead for its small department store peers, but larger, national chains and off-price retailers may find a silver lining.
Analysts cited a strong likelihood that other smaller, regional department stores could also teeter on bankruptcy as credit dries up and consumers shift their spending to discounters.
“The department stores are in a tough space right now,” said Ken Perkins, president of Retail Metrics Inc, which tracks retailers’ performance. “Until things stabilize, the weaker players are going to continue to get shaken out.”
Women’s Wear Daily, the fashion industry’s trade newspaper, cited unnamed sources in a Thursday report that Boscov’s, a Pennsylvania-based operator of about 50 mid-price department stores, could file for bankruptcy as early as Monday if the chain was unable to secure funding.
“Smaller chains .. guaranteed payday loans. have less clout” in negotiating with lenders, said Patricia Edwards, a retail analyst with Wentworth, Hauser and Violich.
“The banks are getting pickier and pickier on their commercial loans; I think that’s going to be the main thing that does these smaller guys in,” she added.
Privately owned Mervyn’s LLC, based in Hayward, California, filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection this week, saying the U.S. housing slump and tighter credit had curbed consumers’ discretionary spending.
Mervyn’s, which was sold to a private investment group by Target Corp (TGT.N: Quote, Profile, Research, Stock Buzz) in 2004, sells apparel and kitchen supplies at 176 stores in seven states stretching from California to Texas.
Filed in: economics.