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Saks Global enters Chapter 11 with little room for error

The news: Saks Global—the parent of Saks Fifth Avenue, Neiman Marcus, Bergdorf Goodman, Saks OFF 5TH, Last Call, and Horchow—filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy while simultaneously securing $1.75 billion in financing from investors led by Bracebridge Capital and Pentwater Capital. The financing will allow Saks to keep operating through the reorganization.

  • The retailer said it will honor customer programs, make go-forward payments to vendors, and maintain employee payroll and benefits throughout the proceedings.
  • It appointed former Neiman Marcus Group CEO Geoffroy van Raemdonck as CEO, succeeding Richard Baker, who stepped down effective January 13.

Just over a year after the storied retailer acquired Neiman Marcus Group to form Saks Global, the merger looks as ill-fated as Kmart’s 2005 takeover of Sears. The deal was pitched as a way to create a luxury retail powerhouse with greater vendor leverage and lower costs. Instead, execution faltered as Saks struggled to pay its vendors, prompting some brands to withhold merchandise, leaving its shelves thin. That supply disruption weighed on demand, with revenues down more than 13% YoY in the quarter ending August 2, and accelerated share losses to rivals like Nordstrom and to its own vendors, many of which operate nearby stores and ecommerce sites.

By late last year, Saks missed a loan payment, and then-CEO Marc Metrick stepped down. The company now owes roughly $3.4 billion to creditors, including $136 million to Chanel, $60 million to Kering, and $26 million to LVMH.

The path forward: Signs suggest the Neiman Marcus Group leadership bench is reasserting itself.

  • Alongside van Raemdonck’s appointment, Saks Global named Darcy Penick president and chief commercial officer, overseeing stores, marketing, buying, digital, analytics, and customer care. She was previously president of Bergdorf Goodman and led product and technology at Neiman Marcus Group.
  • The company appointed Lana Todorovich chief of global brand partnerships, tasked with managing enterprise-level brand relationships. She was most recently president and chief merchandising officer at Neiman Marcus Group.

Those executives face a steep climb.

  • The near-term playbook likely includes closing underperforming and overlapping department stores, along with some Saks OFF 5TH locations. The retailer has already announced plans to close nine off-price stores this year, a notable move given the broader strength of off-price retail, and one that likely reflects cash-flow pressures and strained merchant relationships that limit access to compelling inventory.
  • The harder challenge will be modernizing the brands and merchandise mix to resonate with younger, aspirational consumers. That’s a tall order under normal conditions, particularly as shoppers have moved away from department stores, and even more difficult amid a cash crunch and strained vendor relationships.
  • Even if Saks can make progress on that front, it must still communicate those changes to consumers—a task complicated by tight marketing budgets and the fact that Meta and Google are among the companies it already owes millions of dollars.

All of this is unfolding against a challenging backdrop. We expect US personal luxury sales to grow just 1.0% this year, leaving little margin for error as Saks Global works to steady the business and reset its brands.

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