The home improvement retailer, formerly known as Lumber Liquidators, is closing nearly 100 stores while 300 will remain open. The Richmond, Virginia-based company has filed for bankruptcy.
Which well-known retail stores filed for bankruptcy?
Red Lobster, Walgreens, Rite Aid and many other retailers are battling with worsening financials.
LL Flooring has announced that it will close 94 stores in more than 30, including 11 in California, as it filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy.
The company, formerly known as Lumber Liquidators, said that it is nearly $110 million in long-term debt in filings made in Delaware bankruptcy court on Sunday.
The Richmond, Virginia-based company said in the filings that slowing home sales and rising interest rates contributed to slower sales in the home improvement market. The company’s 300 other stores will remain open.
California locations slated for closure included Bakersfield, Burlingame, Elk Grove, Fairfield, Fresno, Rancho Cucamonga, Salinas, San Diego, Santee Torrance, and Visalia.
LL Flooring said it will stop accepting gift cards at all of its locations, including the ones that aren’t shuttering, on Sept. 4 as a part of the bankruptcy process and that gift cards cannot be exchanged for cash. The company said in the filings that it has approximately $131 million in outstanding gift cards.
LL Flooring said in the filings that it has attempted to find a buyer but is willing to solicit offers to close more stores if one cannot be found.
“The company is engaged in discussions with potential buyers of the company, and this process will allow us to evaluate binding bids through a court-supervised process in order to maximize value for all of our stakeholders,” LL Flooring wrote in a letter to its customers. “While this could change, the company currently anticipates closing a sale of the business by the end of September if a buyer is identified.”
The company said it has garnered $130 million in Chapter 11 financing, funded through existing lenders led by Bank of America.
Where is LL Flooring closing
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LL Flooring is only the latest in a string of retailers shutting down in the Golden State.
Big box discount store Big Lots announced this month that it may close up to 315 stores in a Securities and Exchange Commission filing.
Big Lots marked some stores as closing on the affected location’s info page. The company did not release a list of stores it intended to close.
The Columbus Dispatch − a part of the USA TODAY Network − reported that the Columbus-based retailer had listed 293 locations as “closing soon.”
Seventy-five of the affected stores were in California.
More: Updated: These 75 California Big Lots stores are closing. Here’s what to know
“In 2024, the U.S. economy has continued to face macroeconomic challenges including elevated inflation, which has adversely impacted the buying power of our customers,” Big Lots said in the filing.
The company reported that sales in the first quarter of 2024, which ended in May, fell more than 10% compared to the previous year.
Commerce-based 99 Cents Only Stores, which operated 371 locations in California, Arizona, Nevada, and Texas, announced in April that it would close all of its stores.
Dollar Tree announced in May that it would acquire and reopen 170 of the shuttered former competitor’s stores under its own name, including dozens in California.
Red Lobster, Rite Aid, and Bed Bath & Beyond are among other national chains that have filed for bankruptcy protection and closed down California locations.
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Publish date : 2024-08-13 11:35:00
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