Santa Fe New Mexican

Craft store Joann files for bankruptcy

Despite woes, Ohio-based company says it has no plans to shutter any of its more than 800 stores

- By Jaclyn Peiser

Joann, long a destinatio­n for sewing and crafts enthusiast­s, filed for bankruptcy Monday as consumers continue to scale back on nonessenti­als and online competitio­n intensifie­s.

The company, which has been in operation since 1943, said it has no plans to shutter any of its more than 800 stores in 49 states. In a news release, the Hudson, Ohio-based chain said it had reached a deal to secure “approximat­ely $132 million in new financing and related financial accommodat­ions and expects to reduce funded debt on its balance sheet by approximat­ely $505 million.”

Joann will become a private company after it completes the bankruptcy process, which could occur as early as next month. It also expects to retain its workforce of 18,205 and said the filing would have no effect on company gift cards or its reward program.

Scott Sekella, Joann’s chief financial officer, said the agreement would provide the company with the “financial resources and flexibilit­y necessary to continue to deliver best-in-class product assortment­s and enhance the customer experience.” He also noted that 95% of its stores were “cash flow positive.”

Joann is the latest specialty retailer to seek Chapter 11 protection as online options like Amazon lure away shoppers. Bed Bath & Beyond, Christmas Tree Shops and David’s Bridal all filed for bankruptcy last year. (Amazon founder Jeff Bezos owns The Washington Post.)

Joann and its peers saw a resurgence during the pandemic, as homebound consumers looked for ways to entertain themselves or beautify their spaces. But a spike in inflation — particular­ly at the supermarke­t — forced many Americans to scale back on discretion­ary spending. Though prices overall have cooled, they remain elevated for groceries, which have climbed 25% since the onset of the pandemic in March 2020.

Unlike some of the other struggling retailers, Joann has a promising plan to exit bankruptcy quickly, which “would be a remarkable result in today’s retail climate,” said Sarah Foss, legal and bankruptcy expert at analytics company Debtwire. “Other brick-and-mortar retail chains like Bed Bath & Beyond, Christmas Tree Shops and Soft Surroundin­gs [lingered] in bankruptcy before ultimately having to liquidate.”

Bed Bath & Beyond, one of the first big retailers in the specialty-store space, announced in April 2023 it would close all 360 of its namesake stores. But the brand still lives online after Overstock acquired its intellectu­al property for $21.5 million in June.

But Joann still has its challenges, said Neil Saunders, managing director of GlobalData, a business research and analytics firm. While it’s still “a force to be reckoned with in the fabrics and textiles space, [but] it has lost customers to rivals over recent years.”

 ?? GABBY JONES/NEW YORK TIMES FILE PHOTO ?? A Joann store in Albany, N.Y., in 2020. After a pandemic-era boom in sales, Joann has filed for bankruptcy. The retailer will become a private company owned by a group of its creditors.
GABBY JONES/NEW YORK TIMES FILE PHOTO A Joann store in Albany, N.Y., in 2020. After a pandemic-era boom in sales, Joann has filed for bankruptcy. The retailer will become a private company owned by a group of its creditors.

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