Retail

These 5 retailers closed stores in 2024


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Even in the best of times, retail is a challenging business. 

Although the industry began 2024 with a better than expected financial performance,, several retailers started the first six months with plans to shrink their physical store footprints. Other chains shuttered all their locations as part of bankruptcies.

Foot Locker reiterated its plans to close about 400 mall-based stores within the next two years, and Best Buy, which closed 24 stores last year, said it plans to close up to 15 more this year. Additionally, Walgreens said that it will close around 1,200 stores in the next three years and in mid-December GameStop announced it was eyeing more store closures than in previous years. 

UBS analysts forecast that about 45,000 retail stores might close in the coming years. The report found that the sectors with the most urgent need are apparel and accessories, consumer electronics and home furnishings. However, due in part to the fact that stores are increasingly serving as fulfillment centers for same or next-day pickup or delivery, the industry is far from morphing into a post-store era, UBS said.

“Essentially, our thesis is that retail is experiencing a biological evolution, similar to survival of the fittest,” UBS analysts, led by Michael Lasser, said in the report. “Thus, retailers like Walmart, Target, Costco, Home Depot and other large, leading retailers stand to gain from this natural selection,” UBS said. 

The reality that only strong and savvy retailers survive and thrive is a realization that’s as old as the business itself, Nick Egelnanian, founder and president of SiteWorks, told Retail Dive in an interview.

“Retail is a very difficult business,” Egelnanian said. “It requires two things that are very difficult to navigate together: efficiency and consistency. And at the same time as you’re trying to be efficient and consistent, you have competition all the time that’s eroding existing retailers.” 

Egelanian said retailers that close stores are typically affected by one of three issues.

“You have the ones that are legacy problems, like Macy’s. You have the ones that are just operational problems, like Family Dollar. And then you have the ones that just for one reason or another, make retailing mistakes, and if they’re leveraged — and they tend to be leveraged — if they’re owned by private equity, they get in trouble really fast.”

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Below, in no particular order, are five retailers that have announced plans to close stores in 2024 or in the coming years, along with what they’ve said about the changes to their brick and mortar footprints:

Macy’s

Shortly after taking over as CEO early this year, CEO Tony Spring said the company would push forward with closing 150 Macy’s stores in the next three years. Those locations, he said, delivered less than 10% of sales but comprised 25% of the banner’s square footage. Spring said at the time the retailer had “too many locations that were built for a different era.” In December, the company said it now expects to shutter around 65 stores this year, up from the 55 it estimated earlier. 

Macy’s is “part of a multi-decade decline of a particular type of retail,” said Egelnanian, who added that the outlook for the retailer isn’t good. He says it’s more likely than not Macy’s won’t survive. If it does, “it will survive as a much smaller version of itself and a much changed version of itself.”

As a full-line department store, Egelnanian said Macy’s is at a disadvantage because “their purpose has gone away. … There’s no reason for a full line department store today,” Egelnanian said. “So all that’s left is fashion department stores, and Macy’s has not done a good job of transforming itself into a fashion department store, so that’s why I don’t expect them to survive.” 

Egelnanian said with improved merchandising, the future of Macy’s might include a 200-store chain. As of December, the company operated 503 namesake stores, including its small-format locations, and 735 locations overall under several banners, including Bloomingdale’s and Bluemercury.



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