The home goods retailer said weak sales and slower foot traffic had forced it to consider options for restructuring.
Bed Bath & Beyond, the beleaguered home goods retailer, warned investors on Thursday about rapidly darkening prospects for its future, saying that bankruptcy was a possible option and raising doubts that it could pull off an ambitious turnaround plan it put in place just months ago.
The company could make a decision on its next steps — including whether to file for bankruptcy — within weeks, though it is possible the process will take longer, according to two people familiar with the matter who spoke on the condition of anonymity because the process is confidential.
Bed Bath & Beyond, known to many shoppers for its distinctive and seemingly inescapable blue and white coupons, has struggled for years to compete with the likes of Amazon, as more shoppers have gone online for everyday home products.
The retailer laid out a plan in August to turn itself around that included 150 store closings, cost cuts and layoffs. But it needs cash to execute those plans, and it is not clear that the crucial holiday shopping season brought in enough for it to continue without help from outside investors.
“The company has concluded that there is substantial doubt about the company’s ability to continue as a going concern,” Bed Bath & Beyond said in a statement.
Sue Gove, who became the retailer’s permanent chief executive in October, has been focused on working through a restructuring plan to improve the company’s ailing supply chain and better stock its stores. But its suppliers remain unconvinced, and it said in a regulatory filing that it was at risk of running out of cash in the coming months.
“Before Christmas, there was just a glimmer of hope,” said Neil Saunders, managing director at the retail consulting firm GlobalData. “There was a view that, OK, it’s going to be difficult, but maybe they were going to pull through. Things have just got worse.”
He added, “They sent out a very clear signal today that they’ve just run out of time.”
Bed Bath & Beyond employed about 32,000 workers as of February and said in October that it had closed about half the stores it planned to as part of its restructuring.
The company, which now has roughly 900 stores across the country, reported preliminary earnings Thursday, noting lower sales and slower foot traffic compared with the previous year. The company said its sales were about $1.3 billion for the quarter that ended Nov. 26, about a third lower than the year before, when it had more stores. The period included the run-up to Black Friday.
The retailer estimated that it would record a loss of $386 million in its latest quarter, much worse than the $276 million loss in the previous year, and said it would need more time than expected to close its books. As of March, Bed Bath & Beyond had roughly $3 billion in debt.
The company’s share price closed nearly 30 percent lower on Thursday, giving it a market capitalization of $150 million. At its peak in 2013, the company’s market value was $17 billion.
What we consider before using anonymous sources. Do the sources know the information? What’s their motivation for telling us? Have they proved reliable in the past? Can we corroborate the information? Even with these questions satisfied, The Times uses anonymous sources as a last resort. The reporter and at least one editor know the identity of the source.
In addition to a possible bankruptcy, Bed Bath & Beyond is exploring a number of options to shore up its balance sheet, including selling pieces or all of the company. To help with those efforts, it is working with advisers at the law firm Kirkland & Ellis, the consulting firm Alix Partners and the investment bank Lazard, the two people familiar with the matter said. Alix Partners and Lazard declined to comment. A spokesman for Kirkland did not respond to a request for comment.
“No determinations have been made as of this time,” Julie Strider, a Bed Bath & Beyond spokeswoman, said in a statement regarding the retailer’s next steps.
Its ability to obtain cash through those means will determine whether it needs to file for bankruptcy.
Bed Bath & Beyond plans to give an update on Tuesday about its efforts to raise cash.
A bankruptcy filing would give Bed Bath & Beyond the chance to shed debt and stores and emerge as a leaner, stronger company, as Neiman Marcus was able to after filing for bankruptcy in 2020. But if performance deteriorates, or its suppliers decide they will not offer their support, Bed Bath & Beyond could be forced to close, like Toys “R” Us.
“What we’ve seen many times is that it ends up being a stay of execution,” Michael Baker, a retail analyst at D.A. Davidson, said. “Sometimes that works, but oftentimes you see an announcement of scaling back and having fewer stores and then that’s followed by a complete liquidation.”
The attempted turnaround announced in August is being led by Ms. Gove, who at that time was interim C.E.O. after the abrupt departure of the previous chief executive, Mark Tritton, in June.
But transforming a company under the burden of debt payments and the glare of suppliers that have lost their faith can be tricky. Investing in supply chains and merchandising requires money — and patience.
“Transforming an organization of our size and scale requires time,” Ms. Gove said. “We anticipate that each coming quarter will build on our progress.”
Ms. Gove said she had spoken to suppliers directly in an attempt to instill confidence. But they have continued to hold back, resulting in lower levels of in-stock items. Supply chain challenges made more severe by China’s tough Covid strategy have made suppliers particularly picky about the retailers they sell their product to.
Bed Bath & Beyond has also been trying to win back the support of investors, who have watched as a series of activist investors, including the meme stock favorite Ryan Cohen, have pushed for changes on its board and for the company to consider selling its Buy Buy Baby brand. Mr. Cohen sold his stake in the company in August, pushing its shares down 40 percent.
It has had to grapple with other turmoil. In September, its chief financial officer, Gustavo Arnal, died in what was ruled a suicide. Laura Crossen, the retailer’s chief accounting officer, has since been serving as interim financial chief.
Despite Bed Bath & Beyond’s bespoke challenges, its debt worries resonate with the broader retail industry. Inflation, rising interest rates and continued supply chain challenges are probably setting up retailers up for a challenging 2023. Consumers were willing to spend this holiday season, with U.S. retail sales up 7.6 percent from the previous period of Nov. 1 to Dec. 24, according to Mastercard Spending Pulse. But how much longer that trend will last is unclear, if the economy tips into a recession, as a number of economists have forecast.
And those who may look to the debt market for reprieve will probably find lenders less eager than they have been in the past two years, when interest rates hovered near zero. Lenders that were previously willing to put money into riskier companies like Bed Bath & Beyond may no longer be willing to take that bet. Supply chain issues worldwide mean companies have less product, not only to sell to customers but to offer lenders as collateral.
For a company in as much financial trouble as Bed Bath & Beyond, “it’s very difficult to raise new capital, but it’s also difficult to get your current capital providers to want to play ball for a longer period of time,” said James Gellert, the chief executive of the financial analytic firm RapidRatings International.
That makes it “really hard for a company like them to claw out of the position that they’re currently in.”
Source: Economy - nytimes.com