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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsEddie Bauer, 106-year-old retail brand operator closing all stores in bankruptcy
https://www.thestreet.com/retail/106-year-old-retail-brand-operator-closing-all-stores-in-bankruptcy-eddie-bauerAfter 106 years in business, Eddie Bauer will permanently close all its physical retail stores following a failed attempt to sell its store portfolio during its Chapter 11 bankruptcy proceedings.
Eddie Bauer is permanently closing 174 stores
Eddie Bauer LLC has canceled a planned auction for its remaining stores, which was scheduled for March 6, 2026, after receiving no qualified bids before the March 3 bid deadline, according to bankruptcy court filings.
Eddie Bauers century-old history
Founded in 1920 in Seattle, Washington, Eddie Bauer became one of the most recognizable outdoor apparel brands in the U.S.
Prairie Gates
(7,964 posts)2naSalit
(102,165 posts)And a few others have either sold to other retailers or closed because they priced themselves out of existence. We can't afford their stuff no matter how much we need such products. With the wages of the common worker who works outdoors, especially in the hospitality and recreation industries, $200 winter coats or boots or hiking boots aren't obtainable. REI went south about ten years ago and I'm not sure what happened to Pategonia but they were all too expensive after a while. Almost all of the products are imported so I can imagine they can't keep going.
Welcome to trumpistan.
The Wizard
(13,694 posts)you can deal directly with the Chinese? Our manufacturing base is in History's dust bin.
OldBaldy1701E
(10,993 posts)2naSalit
(102,165 posts)And they were headed to this point eventually, given how things have gone, it just all comes together now.
AllyCat
(18,779 posts)Have some good sales. Only way I can afford their gear.
Botany
(77,124 posts)N/t
Klondike Kat
(937 posts)The last thing I recall purchasing from them was a parka. I still have it and use it when I'm removing snow. I got it about 27 years ago. The cuffs are a little frayed but otherwise it's still the warmest winter coat I own.
CrispyQ
(40,903 posts)& I got a bunch of all-cotton, long-sleeved tee shirts that I still have & love! Half price at $25 each, it was more than I usually pay for a tee, but they've lasted & are nice thick fabric, not thin stuff you can practically see through.
werdna
(1,227 posts)- vulture capitalism.
GiqueCee
(3,971 posts)Last edited Fri Mar 13, 2026, 02:54 PM - Edit history (1)
... is rarely, if ever, better. Economies of scale apparently have a tipping point. This has been proven beyond the remotest shadow of a doubt thousands of times, but corporatists never seem to learn, because HEY! they're "the smartest guys in the room!"
They squeeze the life out of their "associates", while whining that a livable wage would drive prices up, even as they pay a CEO $8,000+ per hour! Or sometimes more.
Corporatism is a cancer, and cancer nearly always consumes, and ultimately kills, its host.
Good encapsulation of our entire economy.
CrispyQ
(40,903 posts)Native
(7,346 posts)WestMichRad
(3,210 posts)I was wondering
TBF
(36,426 posts)LLBean, J Crew - I ordered from all those companies in the 80s/90s. In Wisconsin we had Land's End & shopped online or in their outlet stores.
I needed decent luggage when leaving Wisconsin, so I bought it at Lands End Outlet (it was returned monogram stuff, and of course the monograms weren't mine, but it brought down the price a lot - I used them for years!)
Tommy Carcetti
(44,481 posts)I was never the most fashionable kid or demanded to wear only the most popular brands, but I do admit I took great pride in that one particular shirt.
multigraincracker
(37,459 posts)Winter coat for $5, and a pair of their jeans for $4. at a resale shop. Both looked to be brand new
Many years ago I bought some of their cloths because they had a lifetime guarantee.
edhopper
(37,289 posts)leverage buyouts.
BlueWaveNeverEnd
(13,955 posts)edhopper
(37,289 posts)Obi Wan
bucolic_frolic
(54,861 posts)then they are managed by a public or private equity company that collects brands. Many shoe lines do this, the former Martha Stewart is part of one, there are sporting goods brand collections.
We're to the point where there are only a handful of department store type retailers remaining, Macy's, Kohl's, Nordstrom perhaps the more prominent. And the back side of Kohl's looks like Marshall's or Ross. Of course not much is made in the U.S. of A.
dlk
(13,232 posts)Its the same as a pay cut.
Aristus
(72,075 posts)Such mind-boggling incompetence.
ck4829
(37,631 posts)mwmisses4289
(3,911 posts)Companies, may I make some suggestions?
1. Cut your ceos pay by at least 3/4, 9/10 would be even better. No ceo should be making more than 5 million per anum, and that is more than generous.
2. Bring back real customer service.
3. Take these words attributed to Henry Ford to heart: Your employees are your best customers. Pay them decent wages, treat them like people, treat them decently, and they will help to bring in the customers.
ck4829
(37,631 posts)Initech
(108,541 posts)Bobstandard
(2,265 posts)Each one of the companies that acquired Eddie Bauer probably loaded on debt and took big chunks of the proceeds to reward executives and shareholders, leaving the company cash poor and debt hug. Vulture capitalism at its finest