Saks’ bankruptcy: what game is fashion playing?
The news, coming one year after the acquisition of Neiman Marcus, highlights the broken state of fashion retail
The news of Saks’ bankruptcy forces a simple question: what game is fashion playing?
Roughly a year ago, Saks acquired Neiman Marcus, along with its sister company, Bergdorf Goodman. On the surface, it appeared to be consolidation, strength, and scale. Cool, right?
Now, almost exactly one year later, Saks has filed for bankruptcy.
This isn’t bad luck, nor an unexpected turn of events. It’s the consequence of a business model that no longer works—yet one the industry keeps pretending is still viable. Fashion is carrying on with business as usual, as if nothing were fundamentally wrong. Let’s try to make sense of it.
Saks is not an anomaly. It is a textbook case of the perfect storm hitting traditional luxury retail—a masterclass in what not to do. Its apparent survival has relied more on inertia and prestige than on any real vitality.
Saks’ bankruptcy: the symptom of a broken system
A close examination of the post-acquisition collapse reveals several structural problems.
First: the customer has changed.
Luxury consumption no longer revolves around temples of consumption. Millennials and Gen Z buy differently: they seek meaning, experience, authenticity, storytelling. The dusty, formal department store —rigid, hierarchical, and disconnected — struggles to resonate with generations who expect fluidity, values, and emotional engagement.
Second: the “emptiness retail” model.
Luxury department stores suffer from a profound identity crisis. They are neither exclusive enough to rival monobrand boutiques nor convenient or experiential enough to compete with direct e-commerce. The result is a space full of products but empty of meaning. Constant overproduction and a culture of perpetual discounting replace identity-building, trapping retailers in a vicious cycle where volume compensates for relevance—until it doesn’t.
Third: the brand wars.
Major luxury groups — Chanel, LVMH, Kering — have tightened control over distribution, investing heavily in their own direct-to-consumer channels. Owned stores and proprietary e-commerce platforms steadily erode the relevance and bargaining power of multi-brand megaretailers such as Saks. Brands are now openly competing with their own stockists. They want it all, yet fail to acknowledge a basic truth: the addressable market for luxury is not infinite.
Finally: monstrous debt.
The acquisition of Neiman Marcus was financed with over $4 billion in debt, backed by private equity. This left Saks servicing an unsustainable financial burden precisely as interest rates rose and the market demanded reinvention. Debt didn’t cause the crisis—but it removed any remaining room to adapt.
However, this pattern isn’t unique to Saks. From Farfetch to LuisaViaRoma to SSENSE, whether e-commerce or brick-and-mortar, fashion retailers have recently faced similar outcomes, even without headline-grabbing acquisitions. The conclusion is hard to ignore: the era of mega-retailers reliant on endless discounts and scale alone is over.
And yet, the response remains stubbornly familiar.
Following last Tuesday’s voluntary bankruptcy filing, Saks Global swiftly secured $400 million in new financing (around €345 million). As reported by Reuters, a US bankruptcy judge granted initial approval despite opposition from Amazon, its now-separated commercial partner.
We suggest reading a post we wrote a while back → Fashion industry: a dying patient
Final thoughts
This is business as usual in its most dangerous form: strategic sleepwalking. Consolidating a dying market through acquisitions, rather than radically rethinking the purpose of the physical store and questioning the overproduction model, is not a solution—it’s a fatal error.
Ultimately, Saks acquired two legacy giants — Neiman Marcus and Bergdorf Goodman — at a premium price, loading its balance sheet with crippling debt at the exact moment the sector was pivoting toward streamlined, direct-to-consumer models.
Cool still?
More than anything, Saks’ bankruptcy has become a case study in what not to do when attempting to transform luxury retail for the 21st century. A very expensive lesson.
So, now that the bailout has arrived, the real question remains: is it plausible to emerge from collapse with a massive cash injection alone? Can survival occur without changing the business model itself?
The question seems rhetorical.
And the answer is no.
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