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What’s up with department stores?

After a slew of department stores shuttered last year, including the liquidation of Canadian icon Hudson Bay, more are set to close in 2026 — and probably every year for years to come. 

In mid-January Saks Global, which includes luxury players Saks Fifth Avenue, Neiman Marcus and Bergdorf Goodman, filed for bankruptcy, and observers expect several Saks and Neiman locations to shutter. Macy’s identified the most recent 14 stores set to close under a downsizing strategy that will ultimately mean the end of 150 locations. Even Dillard’s closed a store this month.

Mall anchor vacancies — by and large department stores — are likely to tick up over the near term as a result, according to Green Street’s most recent annual review of more than 1,000 publicly and privately held malls. In the last 15 years, the “demise of the department store business model” contributed to at least 175 mall closures and struggles at other malls, per Green Street’s report.

Even those with slumping sales notched billions in their most recently reported quarters, including Saks Global ($1.6 billion), J.C. Penney ($1.4 billion) and Kohl’s ($3.4 billion). In Q3, with at least comp growth, Macy’s Inc. net sales reached $4.7 billion and Dillard’s reached $1.4 billion. Nordstrom, which went private last year, saw $4.2 billion in net sales in Q4, its most recently reported quarter.

What’s up with department stores? | Retail Dive

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