New York

Luxury Store Barneys Files Bankruptcy Protection, Closes Most Stores

Stores in Chicago, Las Vegas and Seattle will close along with 12 concept and warehouse locations

What to Know

  • The luxury clothing company Barneys New York is filing for bankruptcy, the New York Times first reported
  • The company has nearly a dozen locations, mostly in the swankier districts of cities like Boston, Beverly Hills, California, and New York
  • CNBC reported that the company is looking to keep its NYC store opened if a deal to find buyers is successful

Barneys New York has filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection, the latest retailer to buckle as shoppers move online.

The iconic clothier founded almost a century ago will keep the doors open at its 10-story Madison Avenue store, but it has secured $75 million in financing to pay employees and vendors as it seeks a buyer. 

The retailer "voluntarily filed for reorganization under Chapter 11" in the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the Southern District of New York.

Stores in Chicago, Las Vegas and Seattle will close along with 12 concept and warehouse locations.

Stores in Beverly Hills, California, San Francisco and in Boston will remain open, as well as two warehouse locations in New York and California. However, the company said Tuesday it's reviewing all store leases.

Barneys, controlled by New York hedge fund Perry Capital, listed more than $100 million in debt, and more than $100 million in assets in its bankruptcy filing in the Southern District of New York.

The picture for most traditional retailers grows worse by the year.

The number of retail store closed in the U.S. this year has already surpassed the total number in 2018, according to Coresight Research, which expects 12,000 will be shuttered in 2019. Coresight said 7,567 retail stores have closed this year, compared with 5,864 in all of 2018.

The escalating trade war between China and the U.S. has intensified that pressure, leaving clothing companies scrambling to find new routes and suppliers. Over the past year, the retail sector has consistently bled jobs.

A strong economy has traditionally boosted luxury sales but like retailers across the spectrum, Barneys and other high-end stores have struggled to entice people through the door. They're seeing younger shoppers migrate online to sites like Net-a-Porter, which offers same-day delivery for luxury goods, or resale sites like The RealReal.com.

Nordstrom has reported slowing sales. And Neiman Marcus Group, which also operates Bergdorf Goodman, posted a loss and a sales decline in its most recent quarter.

After 104 years, Lord & Taylor's flagship store on Fifth Avenue locked its doors in January and sold the property to WeWork.

And with sales growing weaker, cost pressures have increased for retailers.

Barneys' Manhattan landlord doubled the rent at its flagship store on Madison Avenue to nearly $30 million this year.

"Like many in our industry, Barneys New York's financial position has been dramatically impacted by the challenging retail environment and rent structures that are excessively high relative to market demand," said CEO Daniella Vitale.

The weight of shifting consumer loyalties and rising costs is now threatening to fell Barneys, which energized its aisles by placing new and unheard of designers beside the well established fashion houses.

Barneys' roots date back to 1923, when Barney Pressman pawned his wife's engagement ring and used the cash to open a 500 square foot men's discount clothing store on Seventh Ave. and 17th St. in Manhattan.

His son shifted the company's focus to luxury clothing in the 1960s and it began to expand nationwide in the 1990s.

The company's crown jewel, its Madison Avenue location, opened in 1993, two years before Amazon initiated operations as an online bookstore.

Joseph Aquino, who runs a real estate services firm under his name in Manhattan, says the days of the shop-till-you drop mentality on Madison Avenue popularized by the HBO popular series of the 1990s "Sex in the City" are over.

"She was 45 and now she is 65... She isn't shopping like she was 45," Aquino said. "We are in the phase where a lot of younger shoppers don't want to go the high street. They sit around and buy online and that's what we are fighting against."

Copyright AP - Associated Press
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