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RetailBankruptcy

These Are the 10 Biggest Retail Bankruptcies of the Last Decade

By
Phil Wahba
Phil Wahba
and
John Kell
John Kell
Down Arrow Button Icon
By
Phil Wahba
Phil Wahba
and
John Kell
John Kell
Down Arrow Button Icon
March 2, 2016, 1:02 PM ET

Sports Authority finally filed for bankruptcy after weeks of speculation and with that, the chain joined the ranks of the largest retail bankruptcies the industry has seen in the past decade.

With assets of up to $1 billion, the athletic gear retailer will land in the seventh spot in a tally led by Circuit City, Linens & Things, and General Atlantic & Pacific Tea (A&P).

The bankruptcy filing of Sports Authority is interesting because it actually participates in a growing pocket of the broader retail industry. Athletic gear popularity has increased as more Americans wear sneakers, athletic tops and t-shirts around town, not just for the purpose of working out.

But that success had led to more competition. Retailers like Target (TGT) and Kohl’s (KSS) have entered the space by moving to sell more athletic wear. Meanwhile, manufacturers like Nike (NKE) and Under Armour (UA) have increasingly focused on selling their gear through their own channels, including their e-commerce platforms. Other players, like Lululemon, completely sell their gear through their own store channels.

All of those factors made it difficult for Sports Authority to compete.

Here is a look at the 10 largest retail bankruptcies in recent years, as ranked by assets at time of the initial court filing. Data is from BankruptcyData.com as well as court filings.

1) Circuit City

Shoppers leave a Circuit City outlet running a store closing sale in Greensboro, North Carolina, U.S., on Sunday, Jan. 25, 2009.

Year: 2008
Assets: $3.75 billion

Circuit City, once the top U.S. electronics retailer, went out of business in 2009 after failing to find a buyer that would keep it going. The company was ultimately felled by its inability to respond as quickly and deftly to the rise of online retailers like Amazon.com (AMZN) and aggressive incursions by mass merchants like Walmart (WMT) and Target (TGT).

2) Linens & Things

Customers walk away after shopping at the going-out-of-business sale at Linens 'N Things November 21, 2008 in Miami, Florida.

Year: 2008
Assets: $1.74 billion

The 570-store housewares chain went under after private equity firm Apollo Global Management (AGM) saddled it with more debt than it could handle. Linens & Things, which at one point had annual sales of $2.7 billion, later came back to life as an online only brand. And nearly two years ago, it was sold to Galaxy Brand Holdings, an investment vehicle owned by private equity firm The Carlyle Group (CG).

3) General Atlantic & Pacific Tea (A&P)

A&P Supermarket, is shown at 230 Saw Mill River Road, Yorktown Heights, N.Y., Dec. 10, 2010. A&P is expected to file for bankruptcy.

Year: 2015
Assets: $1.6 billion

The supermarket chain recently filed for Chapter 11 protection for the second time in five years and sold the bulk of its stores to rivals Acme and Stop & Shop. The grocer was hurt in recent years by companies like Walmart, Costco (COST) and Target stealing consumers on the lower end of the price spectrum, and Whole Foods (WFM) on the higher end. The A&P case is still making its way through bankruptcy court.

4) Radio Shack

A RadioShack store in 2015, the last time the company filed for bankruptcy protection.

Year: 2015
Assets: $1.59 billion

After struggling for years as electronics shoppers shifted online and digital technology emerged, the 4,000-store RadioShack filed for bankruptcy on February, marking an ignominious end for a94-year-old retailer that had sold the first mass-market computer. Last week, a federal judge signed off on Radio Shack's Chapter 11 plan, which distributes proceeds from the company’s liquidation to creditors.

5) Blockbuster

Blockbuster store, 2002

Year: 2010
Assets: $1.54 billion

Blockbuster, once a fixture in America's shopping and strip malls, struggled to compete with the emergence of Netflix (NFLX) and other video-on-demand services. Blockbuster was bought by Dish Network (DISH) in 2011, but two years later the video-rental company said it close its remaining 300 U.S. stores.

6) Borders

UNITED KINGDOM - FEBRUARY 25: Customers browse in a Borders bookstore in a mall on Liverpool Road in the borough of Islington, London, U.K., Saturday, February 25, 2006. Photographer Adrian Brown/Bloomberg News (Photo by Adrian Brown/Bloomberg via Getty Images)

Year: 2011
Assets: $1.42 billion

The Borders bookstore chain was slow to adapt to the e-books phenomenon -- or even to build a user-friendly e-commerce site -- fatal mistakes that saw it lose sales to Amazon (AMZN) and ultimately led to its collapse. Barnes & Noble (BKS) fared better, launching the Nook and eventually benefiting from the revival of print book sales.

7) Sports Authority

Year: 2016
Assets: $1 billion

Owned by private equity group Leonard Green & Partners after a leveraged buyout for $1.3 billion in 2006, the company is entering bankruptcy in a bid to held shed much of its debt and clean up its balance sheet. It will close about 140 of its 463 stores, a move that will likely help rival Dick's Sporting Goods. It could also help Dick's open new locations in underserved markets. Dick's reportedly is interested in buying some stores in bankruptcy court. Meanwhile, a cleaner balance sheet could help Sports Authority make much-needed investments in the company's remaining stores.

8) Sbarro

Year: 2011 and again in 2014
Assets: $490 million

The food-court fixture filed for bankruptcy protection in 2014 for the second time in three years after choking under too much debt and declining traffic at many U.S. malls. That June, Sbarro re-emerged with a smaller debt load and a plan to let customers make their own pizzas at a chain known for reheating pizza, taking a page out of Chipotle's (CMG) playbook.

9) Friedman's

Year: 2008
Assets: $448 million

The recession was a hard time for mid-tier jewelers, with consumers pulling back on items they didn't really need (i.e., diamonds). Friedman's, which had 455 stores, was hit by an involuntary Chapter 7 liquidation filing at force, later changed to a Chapter 11 proceeding. But ultimately, Friedman's went out of business.

10) Brookstone

A Brookstone store is seen at Rockefeller Center in New York City.

Year: 2014
Assets: $407 million

Brookstone, the specialty retailer famous for massage chairs and travel electronics, filed for bankruptcy protection in early 2014, hurt by high debt. But unlike many of its bankrupt retail peers, the company has pulled through and continues to operate as a chain with over 200 stores.

About the Authors
Phil Wahba
By Phil WahbaSenior Writer
LinkedIn iconTwitter icon

Phil Wahba is a senior writer at Fortune primarily focused on leadership coverage, with a prior focus on retail.

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By John KellContributing Writer and author of CIO Intelligence

John Kell is a contributing writer for Fortune and author of Fortune’s CIO Intelligence newsletter.

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