Bebe to close all stores, becoming latest retail casualty
Women’s clothing chain Bebe Stores said Friday it would close all of its locations after a string of losses, becoming the latest casualty in the retail industry as the fallout from online competition and shifting fashion preferences spreads.
The company said in a Securities and Exchange Commission filing that it signed a deal with liquidator Tiger Capital Group to sell all of its remaining inventory. The retailer expects to close all of its stores by the end of May.
The exact number of stores was not immediately available. Bebe had 180 locations as of Jan. 2, according to a separate SEC filing. The company said in a news release March 22 it had 134 retail stores and 34 outlet locations and sold products through an additional 75 locations.
The company’s demise, which comes without a bankruptcy filing, continues a wave of implosions among national retailers as malls face declining foot traffic.
Bebe joins clothing store chains The Limited and Wet Seal among the recent chains to go away. Rue21 recently said it would close up to 400 stores.
Retailers are grappling with intense online competition, namely from Amazon, and nimble brickand-mortar competitors such as H&M and Forever 21.
Bankruptcy filings of other retailers within the past several weeks have included Payless ShoeSource, Gander Mountain and HHGregg.
Details of Bebe’s liquidation plans were not immediately available. Executives at the company’s California headquarters could not be reached for comment. Representatives for Tiger Capital Group were also not immediately available for comment.
Bebe’s strategy was based on designing and selling its own line of women’s clothing it called “unique, sophisticated and timelessly sexy,” which the chain said defined “next-generation chic while staying true to its assertive, provocative origins.”
Founded by CEO Manny Mashouf in San Francisco in 1976, the store drew its name from Shakespeare’s phrase “To be, or not to be.”