logo
Why the new Rite Aid bankruptcy could kill Seattle's Bartell Drugs

Why the new Rite Aid bankruptcy could kill Seattle's Bartell Drugs

Miami Herald07-05-2025
Business Why the new Rite Aid bankruptcy could kill Seattle's Bartell Drugs
Rite Aid plans to sell off all of its assets, including Seattle staple Bartell Drugs, as it again files for bankruptcy protection.
The national drugstore chain emerged from Chapter 11 bankruptcy last September after cutting its debt and shuttering stores across the country, including every Bartell store in downtown Seattle. Rite Aid also closed the flagship Bartell in Seattle's University Village shopping center earlier this year.
As of last year, a little less than 100 Rite Aid stores and about 40 Bartell locations were left standing. They'll all be sold or eventually closed as Rite Aid pursues a sale for 'substantially all of its assets,' Rite Aid said in a statement Monday.
The company will keep its stores open and operating throughout the sale process, with $1.94 billion in new financing commitments to support pharmacy services and employee wages.
CEO Matt Schroeder said in a statement that potential national and regional buyers have expressed interest in the company and its assets.
'As we move forward, our key priorities are ensuring uninterrupted pharmacy services for our customers and preserving jobs for as many associates as possible,' he said.
Rite Aid purchased Bartell in 2020 for $95 million, amid a strained time for the drugstore industry. National chains blamed increased theft, reduced consumer demand and a pandemic for drops in revenue and thinner profit margins.
'We felt that this was the only answer,' George D. Bartell, former chairman of Bartell, told the Times when the company was sold in 2020. 'It was getting more difficult for regional operators to compete in the market.'
Bartell faced a tough path after its parent company emerged from bankruptcy last year.
The market still wasn't kind to drugstore chains. Rite Aid's plan had bought them some breathing room but didn't inject adequate financing to revive the company, according to Neil Saunders, a managing director at data analysis company GlobalData.
'It didn't eliminate the debt or the cost of running stores,' he said. 'And because they didn't have much cash, their stores were just shelves and it started this cycle where customers didn't want to shop there because the stores were bare.'
It's not just Rite Aid feeling the pressure. Pharmacy giants Walgreens and CVS are closing stores to settle their balance sheets. The general direction of drugstore chains is downward, Saunders said, but Rite Aid was the weakest of the three.
With fewer than 30 locations remaining, Bartell stores could be sold. But Saunders, a retail industry veteran, expects more closures than sales. The other two big drugstore chains aren't looking to expand their portfolio, and grocery chains that operate pharmacies aren't in the market for stand-alone drugstores.
Walgreens and CVS may look over the portfolio and cherry-pick a few locations, but aren't likely to scoop up a bunch of them.
'For Bartell it's a great shame because it's a good local brand,' Saunders said. 'I have no idea on Earth why Rite Aid bought them because it kind of represented the death knell for them.'
Rite Aid and Bartell's struggles have created pharmacy deserts in the Seattle area, leading to longer travel and wait times for customers. The closure of a Bartell in the Chinatown International District turned a 5-minute walk to the closest retail pharmacy for residents to a 20-minute walk.
If Rite Aid can't sell off its own stores or Bartell locations, it could also add to the glut of retail space in the Seattle area. The company operates about 1.3 million square feet of space in the metro area.
So far, the retail market has been able to absorb pharmacy closures without too much trouble. Elliott Krivenko, director of market analytics for Seattle at CoStar, a real estate analytics company, said that segment of retail has been dynamic lately. Even with a wave of closures over the past few years, landlords have been able to fill up the spaces within about 6 to 8 months as companies like H Mart and Barnes & Noble are in expansion mode.
Some Bartell locations are still vacant, adding a 30,000-square-foot empty box to the neighborhoods they occupy. But prime locations have already been turned around. Din Tai Fung, a popular Taiwan-based restaurant chain, is moving its University Village digs to the former Bartell store in the shopping complex. The shuttered Bartell at Fifth Avenue and Olive Way will become a deli later this year.
However, big box stores like Big Lots, Jo Ann Fabrics and Party City are facing the same struggles as the drugstore industry and are closing stores. Collectively, those companies have vacated about 800,000 square feet of space in the Seattle metro area over the past year.
'If Rite Aid eventually adds another 1.3 million square feet to that, we are starting to really test the market for spaces in the 15,000 to 30,000 square foot range,' Krivenko said.
Copyright (C) 2025, Tribune Content Agency, LLC. Portions copyrighted by the respective providers.
This story was originally published May 6, 2025 at 6:07 PM.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

At Home is closing several stores, including one in Indiana
At Home is closing several stores, including one in Indiana

Indianapolis Star

time7 hours ago

  • Indianapolis Star

At Home is closing several stores, including one in Indiana

At Home is closing more stores, including one in Indiana, after filing for Chapter 11 bankruptcy on June 16, according to an Aug. 1 statement by retail firm Hilco Consumer-Retail. No Indiana stores were included in the initial list of closures in court documents, but the retailer recently announced more locations would close. The store at 3175 W. Third St. in Bloomington will close by Sept. 30, 2025. As of Aug. 4, none of the following stores are listed as closing.

Bankrupt home goods chain reopens formerly doomed stores
Bankrupt home goods chain reopens formerly doomed stores

Miami Herald

time7 hours ago

  • Miami Herald

Bankrupt home goods chain reopens formerly doomed stores

The home goods sector has suffered through economic havoc over the last two years as major retail chains have collapsed, liquidated, and shut down stores. Bed Bath & Beyond filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy on April 23, 2023, and liquidated its 360 Bed Bath & Beyond and 120 BuyBuy Baby stores. in June 2023 purchased Bed Bath & Beyond out of bankruptcy, changed the company's name to Beyond Inc. Then, in February 2025, the company Bed Bath & Beyond's former BuyBuy baby brand. Big Lots filed for Chapter 11 protection on Sept. 9, 2024, in the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the District of Delaware, seeking to sell its assets to stalking-horse bidder Nexus Capital Management for a $760 million bid. However, the deal fell through, and the debtor on Dec. 19, 2024, said it would shut down all 1,392 stores. Related: Iconic retail chain shuts down its remaining stores in bankruptcy Eight days later, Big Lots agreed to a transaction with Gordon Brothers Retail Partners that allowed for the transfer of stores, distribution centers, and intellectual property to other retailers and companies. Under the plan, Variety Wholesalers Inc. would purchase 200 to 400 Big Lots stores and operate them under the Big Lots brand, along with up to two distribution centers. The distress in the home goods sector has continued as At Home filed for bankruptcy protection in June 2025 and said it would close 26 stores. But the company couldn't seem to make up its mind on which stores to close, as it has twice decided to reopen stores it had planned to close. The home goods retailer, for the second time, changed its mind on closing two stores when it filed a notice on Aug. 1 in the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the District of Delaware removing its Dedham, Mass., and Leesburg, Va., stores from its closing list. At Home filed an earlier notice on July 15 to remove its Princeton, N.J., and Wauwatosa, Wis., stores from the closing list. Dedham, Wis. The debtor did not indicate reasons for cancelling the store-closing sales. The home goods retailer had included the stores on its original list of 26 stores to close, or 10% of its 260 locations in 40 states, during its bankruptcy case. The retailer already closed six stores in the 12 months preceding its bankruptcy filing, according to the debtor's motion to conduct store closing sales. More bankruptcy Major iconic food brand files for Chapter 11 bankruptcyPopular Dairy Queen rival franchisee files Chapter 11 bankruptcyPopular vision care chain files for Chapter 11 bankruptcy The retail chain also added six stores to the closure list on Aug. 1, located in Council Bluffs, Iowa; Lake in the Hills, Ill.; Bloomington, Ind.; Ypsilanti, Mich.; Ocean Township, N.J.; and West Bountiful, Utah, for a new total of 28 stores to be closed. The 28 stores designated for closing in its bankruptcy are located in California (8), Illinois (3), New Jersey, (3), New York (2), Washington (2), Florida (1), Indiana (1), Iowa (1), Massachusetts (1), Michigan (1), Minnesota (1), Montana (1), Pennsylvania (1), Utah (1), Virginia (1). California (8)Illinois (3)New Jersey, (3)New York (2)Washington (2)Florida (1)Indiana (1)Iowa (1)Massachusetts (1)Michigan (1)Minnesota (1)Montana (1)Pennsylvania (1)Utah (1)Virginia (1) The Coppell, Texas-based retail chain filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy on June 16, with plans to close 26 stores and a restructuring support agreement that would eliminate $1.62 billion in debt and hand ownership to its prepetition lenders. The home decor retailer filed its petition listing $1 billion to $10 billion in assets and liabilities, which include $1.998 billion in noteholder debt, consisting of $1.94 billion in secured note debt and $58 million in senior unsecured notes. Related: Major mattress retailer files Chapter 7 bankruptcy, closes stores At Home faced financial and operational headwinds that included increased freight rates driven by rising inflation, softening demand in the home decor market, and a consumer shift away from brick-and-mortar shopping with an increased focus on online purchases, according to a declaration from Chief Financial Officer Jeremy Aguilar. The company, founded in 1979 as Garden Ridge Pottery, began out-of-court restructuring efforts in early 2025 at a time when tariffs began rising for its many foreign suppliers. After considering strategic alternatives, the company negotiated a restructuring support agreement with its prepetition lenders before filing for bankruptcy and seeking a $600 million debtor-in-possession financing transaction, which includes $200 million in new money. Don't miss the move: Subscribe to TheStreet's free daily newsletter The Arena Media Brands, LLC THESTREET is a registered trademark of TheStreet, Inc.

Dr. Phil's Peteski Productions pays $925K to Merit Street Media workers following Chapter 11 filing
Dr. Phil's Peteski Productions pays $925K to Merit Street Media workers following Chapter 11 filing

Fox News

time10 hours ago

  • Fox News

Dr. Phil's Peteski Productions pays $925K to Merit Street Media workers following Chapter 11 filing

Dr. Phil McGraw's Peteski Productions says it voluntarily agreed to pay former Merit Street Media employees their pre-bankruptcy compensation as the legal process plays out. Merit Street Media, which was formed in 2023 and launched Merit TV in 2024, was a joint venture of McGraw's Peteski Productions and Trinity Broadcasting that filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy in July and simultaneously filed a lawsuit against the network that specializes in Christian programming. According to a memo sent by Peteski attorneys to former Merit Street Media employees and independent contractors, Dr. Phil's production company agreed to loan the bankrupt company enough cash to fully pay workers for pre-bankruptcy work. The initial loan amount fell short once Trinity Broadcasting was allowed to delay a key hearing by three weeks, but Peteski has upped the figure to do the "right thing." "As this process has played out, one of our top priorities has been to do whatever we can for the workers. We thought the issue of worker compensation would be resolved at a July 29 hearing, but TBN asked for and received a three-week delay. In light of the real needs of the workers for this to be resolved, we felt this was the right thing to do," a Peteski spokesperson told Fox News Digital. Over 150 checks were written for a total of $925,000, according to the memo. The payments occurred outside of official bankruptcy proceedings. McGraw agreed to provide Merit Street with new episodes of his "Dr. Phil Show," primetime specials and other content, while Trinity Broadcasting contributed distribution and production services, according to the lawsuit that essentially blames the Christian broadcaster for the bankruptcy. Merit Street accused Trinity Broadcasting of reneging on its obligations and abusing "its position as the controlling shareholder of Merit Street to improperly and unilaterally burden Merit Street with unsustainable debt, doing so either without notice or in direct violation of promises not to do so." The vast majority of former Merit Street Media employees are out of work, while a select few have stayed on based on the supervision of a bankruptcy judge. The bankruptcy filing lists both estimated assets and liabilities in the $100-$500 million range. Merit Street is seeking damages, legal costs, and "further relief as the Court may deem just and proper." Trinity Broadcasting did not immediately respond to a request for comment by Fox News Digital.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store