Mervyns to liquidate its stores

Published: Saturday, Oct. 18 2008 12:27 a.m. MDT

NEW YORK — Ailing department store chain Mervyns LLC, which had been operating for almost five decades, has become the latest merchant headed for extinction.

The retailer, which filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection in July, said Friday that it plans to begin liquidation sales at its remaining 149 stores and wind down its business. Mervyns has six stores in Utah, along the Wasatch Front.

The chain, based in Hayward, Calif., said liquidation sales during the holiday season were the best way to maximize value for the company's creditors after exhausting all its options, including the sale of the company.

It also cited a fierce retail environment and declining liquidity as factors forcing the company's liquidation. Mervyns now operates mainly in California and has seen its sales drop further as the state is among the hardest hit by the real-estate slump.

Mervyns said it plans to pursue the liquidation under the Chapter 11 bankruptcy code, a move that typically allows companies to retain more control over the selling off of assets. In a Chapter 7 filing, the court would immediately appoint a trustee to take over the case. The company said it intends to retain an outside professional-services firm to assist in the liquidation sales of inventory.

"We are disappointed with this outcome, but the company's declining liquidity position and the extremely challenging retail environment, together with the fact that we have exhausted all other possibilities, requires that we take this action," said John Goodman, chief executive of Mervyns, in a statement. "We are confident that the deep discounts available through going out of business sales will drive significant traffic in our stores."

Mervyns' announcement marks the latest retail obituary and represents yet another blow to the nation's malls, which are grappling with increasing vacancy rates in a deteriorating economic environment.

On Tuesday, specialty retailer Linens 'n Things, which filed for bankruptcy protection in May, announced it will begin liquidation sales at its stores as early as this week, after failing to find a buyer that wanted to operate the company.

The Bombay Co., the home-accessories retailer that filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy in September 2007, liquidated its business in the U.S. during last year's holiday season.

Gadget retailer Sharper Image Corp., which filed for bankruptcy in February and eventually liquidated its stores, is seeking a new life as a wholesaler. It announced on Monday it signed a $540 million licensing agreement with manufacturer HoMedics to create gadgets to be sold in the U.S. and elsewhere.

For mall landlords, the effect of Mervyns' liquidation "could be significant," according to Richard D. Hastings, a consumer strategist with Global Hunter Securities. He added, however, he doesn't believe that Mervyns' liquidation sales would be a huge blow to store competitors, because bankrupt stores undergoing organized liquidation sales usually sell the best brands to discounters and closeout chains.

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