The Boston Globe

Macy’s to close 150 stores but expand Bluemercur­y and Bloomingda­le’s

- By Jordyn Holman

Macy’s said Tuesday that it would vastly reshape its strategy and retail footprint, closing about 150 Macy’s stores over the next three years while expanding its upscale Bloomingda­le’s and Bluemercur­y chains.

The moves put the stamp of the company’s new CEO, Tony Spring, on an effort to improve the profitabil­ity of the largest department store operator in the United States and stave off a potential takeover bid.

It is the second major downsizing of the Macy’s chain since 2020 and will leave the company with 350 stores, slightly more than half the number it had before the pandemic. The company did not identify the stores that are closing.

Macy’s said the “underprodu­ctive locations” it planned to close accounted for 25 percent of the company’s overall square footage but just 10 percent of sales. The company said it expected to take in $600 million to $750 million by selling these stores and streamlini­ng some of its warehouses.

“We have to focus on having the best stores, not the largest number of stores,” Spring said on a call with analysts Tuesday.

The company said it would start notifying workers later that day at stores it planned to close. It plans to shutter roughly 50 stores this fiscal year and the rest by the end of 2026.

Macy’s did not identify the locations, but one is the San Francisco store in Union Square, said Mayor London Breed’s office. The store, a fixture in the shopping district for generation­s, will remain open for the next year as Macy’s looks for a new owner for the property, the mayor’s office said.

As Macy’s reduces its retail footprint, Bloomingda­le’s is expected to open 15 locations. Bluemercur­y, the company’s beauty chain, will add 30 stores, and remodel others. As of November, there were 58 Bloomingda­le’s and 158 Bluemercur­y locations.

“There’s less competitio­n there, but the problem is that it’s not clear that the luxury department store really has a great future,” said David Swartz, a retail analyst at the financial services firm Morningsta­r. “A lot of luxury labels are doing their own direct selling.”

E-commerce sales at Bloomingda­le’s gives the company confidence that adding stores will boost digital sales in surroundin­g areas. It said about 80 percent of Bloomingda­le’s digital sales are in markets where it has physical stores.

The company will open its smaller-format Bloomingda­le’s stores — known as Bloomie’s — and outlet stores over the next three years, Spring said on the call. In recent years, the company has been opening smaller stores in strip malls, rather than enclosed malls, which have been losing shoppers. “That’s where the whole market is going,” Swartz said.

“It makes sense for Macy’s to open up stores in those smaller locations, but is it too late?” he said. “There’s already other companies doing the same thing.”

The decision to pare the midmarket Macy’s chain while increasing the luxury chains’ presence is a sign that Spring wants to reposition the company’s overall image so consumers see it as a higher-end destinatio­n. But, he said, that does not necessaril­y mean the company’s stores will become a more expensive place to shop.

“I don’t believe that taste and style need to cost more; I don’t think it should be reserved for the affluent,” Spring said Tuesday in an interview. “I think that we need to do a better job in our content and in our presentati­on and in our marketing, so that the customer sees and is inspired by what we’re selling.”

Customer research showed that people wanted a better shopping experience at Macy’s, the company said, whether with improved visual merchandis­ing or more help from store workers. The sale of some of its assets could help underwrite such improvemen­ts, including revamping the merchandis­e assortment and adding more workers in areas such as the shoes and women’s ready-to-wear department­s.

Macy’s will increase the number of workers in some of its stores, using data to determine the appropriat­e staffing levels and training workers on how to recommend products to shoppers and assist them better in the fitting rooms.

Spring, who spent four decades at Bloomingda­le’s, took the corporate reins at a challengin­g time. In December, an investor group submitted a bid that would take Macy’s private at a value of $5.8 billion. The investors, Arkhouse Management and Brigade Capital Management, said that unless the retailer began sharing nonpublic informatio­n with them, they might take their offer to shareholde­rs.

The activists have since nominated nine individual­s to Macy’s board. The company said in a statement last week that the activists had not provided financing details and had instead chosen to start the proxy contest. On Tuesday, Spring told analysts that Macy’s board was evaluating the candidates but asked that their questions pertained only to the retailer’s financial results and three-year strategy that it had announced.

A representa­tive of the investor groups did not respond to a request for comment Tuesday.

After an initial sales boost from consumer spending on all manner of items early in the pandemic, Macy’s has had a sales slump.

On Tuesday, the company also reported earnings for the fourth quarter, which included the holiday shopping season. Net sales of $8.1 billion were in line with analysts’ estimates. Sales at both Macy’s and Bloomingda­le’s were down from a year earlier, while those at Bluemercur­y rose 2.3 percent — a sign that shoppers were continuing to gravitate toward the beauty and skin-care categories.

The company said it would incur a $1 billion charge related to the restructur­ing and closing of the stores.

 ?? JUSTIN SULLIVAN/GETTY IMAGES ?? Macy’s said the “underprodu­ctive locations” it planned to close accounted for 25 percent of the company’s overall square footage but just 10 percent of sales.
JUSTIN SULLIVAN/GETTY IMAGES Macy’s said the “underprodu­ctive locations” it planned to close accounted for 25 percent of the company’s overall square footage but just 10 percent of sales.

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