The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Gymboree to close all area stores

10,000 may lose jobs in kids’ clothing retailer’s second bankruptcy.

- By Bruce Einhorn and Katherine Doherty

Gymboree Group Inc. will shut down after going bankrupt a second time, the victim of falling mall traffic and cheaper online sources of kids’ clothing. About 10,000 people could lose their jobs.

The retailer filed for protection from creditors owed about $212 million in U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the Eastern District of Virginia, according to a statement late Wednesday. The San Francisco-based company, which operates 945 stores under three brands in the U.S. and Canada, plans to close its Gymboree and Crazy 8 chains after failing to find anyone willing to buy them, court papers show. A unit of Goldman Sachs Group Inc. is leading bids for Gymboree’s higher-end Janie and Jack business.

Gymboree will join Toys R Us Inc., Shopko Stores and Bon-Ton Stores Inc. in the ranks of defunct retailers that collapsed as shoppers deserted malls and bought online. The decision came less than a year and a half after Gymboree emerged from an earlier Chapter 11 bankruptcy that cut debt, overhauled operations and enabled it to launch a re-branded clothing line.

“We are saddened and highly disappoint­ed that we must move ahead with a wind-down of the Gymboree and Crazy 8 businesses,” Chief Executive Officer

Shaz Kahng, appointed in November, said in the statement. An auction of company assets is expected by Feb. 25.

Going-out-of-business sales are being planned to dispose of inventory, raising about $155 million in net proceeds, Chief Restructur­ing Officer Stephen Coulombe said in court papers. The company expects the sales and store closings will continue through April.

The bankruptcy comes at a time of weakness for the children’s apparel industry, with sales at children’s and infant wear stores falling 5.8 percent in November and 5.9 percent in December, according to First Data.

Shares of The Children’s Place Inc., a Secaucus, N.J.based rival of Gymboree, have dropped 46 percent since early November.

Gymboree was acquired by Bain Capital for about $1.8 billion in 2010. The buyout saddled the company with more than $1 billion in debt, leading Gymboree to cut costs and defer investment­s before filing for court protection in June 2017. It emerged with less debt and fewer stores.

But competitio­n was still robust from Children’s Place, the Gap, discount stores, internet retailers and big-box retailers that sold clothing at cheaper prices to get shoppers into the store. Margins shrank, and Gymboree’s net retail sales dropped 27 percent to $573 million during the nine months ended Nov. 3, court documents show.

“The decline in revenue and rise in merchandis­ing costs outpaced Gymboree’s ability to reduce its fixed cost structure composed largely of store rent, labor costs, and corporate general and administra­tive expense,” court documents show.

The staff includes 10,100 people on a full- and parttime basis, according to the filings. The vast majority, 9,600, are hourly workers. Gymboree said the $212 million in total obligation­s include $79.1 million under a senior secured asset-based revolving credit facility, $44.5 million of outstandin­g letters of credit under the ABL facility and around $89 million under its senior secured term loan.

Special Situations Investing Group, a lending and investment affiliate of Goldman Sachs, is serving as the stalking-horse bidder in a court-supervised sale process for Janie and Jack.

 ?? SPENCER PLATT / GETTY IMAGES 2017 ?? Gymboree joins such defunct retailers as Toys R Us, Shopko Stores and Bon-Ton Stores.
SPENCER PLATT / GETTY IMAGES 2017 Gymboree joins such defunct retailers as Toys R Us, Shopko Stores and Bon-Ton Stores.

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