Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

Mattress Firm chain files for bankruptcy

- By Abha Bhattarai

Mattress Firm, the country’s largest mattress chain, filed for bankruptcy Friday, as the latest retailer to succumb to mounting online competitio­n.

The Houston-based company, which has 3,400 locations nationwide, plans to close 200 stores in the coming days and as many as 700 by year’s end, according to its bankruptcy filing.

There are more than 50 Mattress Firm stores in South Florida, according to its website. It was unclear on Friday how many of those might close as a result of the company’s restructur­ing. The company did not return messages seeking comment.

“Leading up to the holiday shopping season, we will exit up to 700 stores in certain markets where we have too many locations in close proximity to each other,” Steve Stagner, chief executive of Mattress Firm, said in a statement. He added that the company would use the money it saved from store closings to “improve our product offering, provide greater value to our customers and strategica­lly expand in existing markets where we see the greatest opportunit­ies to serve our customers.”

The company said it does not anticipate delayed deliveries and will keep paying its suppliers in full.

Mattress Firm is the latest in a string of national retailers, including Brookstone and Nine West, to file for bankruptcy as consumers flock online. The company, founded in 1986, has long had a stronghold on the mattress industry. In 2015, it bought rival Sleepy’s for $780 million and announced plans to expand throughout the Northeast

and Mid-Atlantic regions.

But analysts say the company had too many locations — and did too little to keep up with the crush of online competitor­s that are winning over shoppers with convenienc­e and more transparen­t pricing.

“This is a wake-up call for traditiona­l mattress chains: The 1960s model doesn’t work anymore,” said Bob Phibbs, chief executive of New York-based consultanc­y the Retail Doctor. “The traditiona­l mattress-buying experience didn’t make people feel like they mattered. It made them feel used.” In short, he said, buying mattress often felt like

abuying a used car: Customers weren’t sure how to compare one model with another, and the barrage of promotions and discounts made them feel insecure about whether they were actually getting a good deal.

“The reality is that mattress companies have been ripe for disruption,” Phibbs said.

Mattress Firm’s bankruptcy filing comes just days after Amazon.com announced it was getting into the online bed-in-a-box business, popularize­d in recent years by the likes of Casper, Tuft & Needle and Leesa. Walmart launched its own online premium mattress brand, Allswell, earlier this year. The basic premise of each brand is the same: Buy a mattress

online and try it at home. If you don’t like it, you get a full refund. (Jeff Bezos, the founder and chief executive of Amazon, also owns The Washington Post.)

Mattress Firm has had other woes, too: Last year it lost an important contract with Tempur Sealy Internatio­nal, and its parent company, Steinhoff Internatio­nal Holdings, has been mired in an accounting scandal.

“Between declining sales and over-expansion, it’s been a downhill battle for Mattress Firm,” said Stephanie Lieb, a bankruptcy attorney for Tampabased Trenam Law. “If consumers are going to a brick-and-mortar location, it’s because they want better service, not just a mattress.”

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