logo
Saks Global Hires Advisers as It Works to Shore Up Liquidity

Saks Global Hires Advisers as It Works to Shore Up Liquidity

Yahoo14-05-2025

Saks Global, which told bondholders two weeks ago that it was looking at options to shore up its balance sheet, has brought some heavy-hitting advisers on board to help with the process.
Sources told WWD that the Saks and Neiman Marcus parent is working with financial advisers at Bank of America and PJT Partners as well as legal experts at Willkie Farr & Gallagher and Kirkland & Ellis.
More from WWD
Saks Connections: Luxury Reset and Industry Shake-up
What's the Big Idea? The WWD Beauty CEO Summit Speakers Have Quite a Few
Saks Arrived on Amazon, the Trade War Is Still on Its Way
Bank of America declined to comment and none of the parties immediately replied to a WWD query on Monday.
While PJT and Kirkland are known for their expertise in helping companies navigate distressed situations, sources said Saks is looking to tap into the capital markets and strengthen its liquidity and is not working with the teams that handle other situations, like bankruptcies.
The idea is to explore the company's different options and to beef up the balance sheet in 'an efficient manner' and not with a 'hair on fire process,' said one personal familiar with the effort.
'There's money around the edges' that can be tapped into, said the source, adding that every option was being looked at.
Executive chairman Richard Baker and chief executive officer Marc Metrick have been working on a high-wire transformation at Saks — from integrating Neiman's and launching a storefront on Amazon to extending payment terms on vendors and smoothing out the finances.
While that already seemed an ambitious undertaking when the company sold $2.2 billion in bonds to close the $2.7 billion Neiman's acquisition in December, it is now all the harder in a world scrambled by the Trump administration's on again, off again tariffs.
The trade war, the attendant macro uncertainty and the roller-coaster market have especially pressured companies like Saks that are working through a transition.
The company is said to still have liquidity of nearly $400 million, as it did when it updated bondholders late last month, and is positioned to make its $120 million interest payment on the bonds next month.
But keeping bondholders calm has been a job.
While the debt was trading at 97 cents on the dollar at the start of the year, it was going for about 60 cents on the dollar on Monday — a sharp decline for bonds just six months old.
Metrick previously told bondholders that the company was working on a $300 million FILO facility that could be tapped quickly and would not add to the debt load as it would be carved out of the existing $1.8 billion asset-backed loan.
Work on that is said to be coming along while the new advisers are also helping the Saks explore other options — including the potential sale of some of its $3.5 billion real estate portfolio or a sale-leaseback transaction or tapping into the value of noncore businesses.
That would have Saks, which turned to vendors to help it through lean times in the past, digging into its own piggy bank to keep the business moving forward.
Sources said the retailer plans to stick to its new 90-day payment terms with vendors while beginning to pay past-due bills to brands in July, as previously laid out.
Best of WWD
Harvey Nichols Sees Sales Dip, Losses Widen in Year Marred by Closures
Nike Logs $1.3 Billion Profit, But Supply Chain Issues Persist
Zegna Shares Start Trading on New York Stock Exchange

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Bank of America says buy these five stocks that are set to rally
Bank of America says buy these five stocks that are set to rally

CNBC

time7 hours ago

  • CNBC

Bank of America says buy these five stocks that are set to rally

Bank of America thinks there's a slate of stocks worth snapping up and still have room to run. The firm said buy-rated companies like Nvidia have plenty of upside heading into summer. Other names include Philip Morris, Boot Barn, Amazon and Netflix . Netflix The streaming giant is firing on all cylinders and well positioned for growth, according to the firm. Analyst Jessica Reif Ehrlich recently raised her price target on the stock to $1,490 per share from $1,175, reflecting on her bullish thesis. "Year-to-date, Netflix has been a top performer in our coverage driven by: sustained earnings momentum, positive subscriber trends and a defensive rotation related to tariffs," she wrote. There's more to come as the company ramps up its advertising technology ,which should help the bottom line, the analyst said. "We continue to view Netflix as well positioned given the company's unmatched scale in streaming, further runway for subscriber growth, significant opportunities in advertising and sports/live and continued earnings and [free cash flow] growth," Reif Ehrlich added. The stock is up 39% this year. Amazon Analyst Justin Post recently lifted his price target on the e-commerce giant to $248 per share from $230. The firm said that robotics are poised to play a key role in how Amazon operates and this should increase the company's already "competitive moats." Post said the use of drones along with robotics will help margins, as well further reduce delivery times. "Going forward, we expect Amazon to leverage robots to: 1) reduce labor dependency; 2) increase order accuracy; and 3) improve warehouse efficiency, driving material cost savings," he added. Meanwhile shares are up more than 15% over the past 12 months, and they have room for further growth, Post said. "We think Amazon is well positioned to capitalize on the global growth of eCommerce and other secular trends such as cloud computing, online advertising and connected devices," he added. Boot Barn The Western-themed footwear company is firing on all cylinders, according to Bank of America. Analyst Christopher Nardone recently raised his price target on the stock to $192 per share from $173 citing a slew of positive catalysts ahead. "We are encouraged that the acceleration in comp trends has been broad-based across major merchandise categories and geographies," he wrote. The firm said the company is a multi-year growth story with plenty more room to run. In addition, the pricing environment remains very friendly and could lead to share gains, Nardone added. "With larger scale comes better pricing, better selection, more exclusive brands, and better customer service," he said. The stock is up 8% this year. Netflix "Year-to-date, Netflix has been a top performer in our coverage driven by: sustained earnings momentum, positive subscriber trends and a defensive rotation related to tariffs. … We continue to view Netflix as well positioned given the company's unmatched scale in streaming, further runway for subscriber growth, significant opportunities in advertising and sports/live and continued earnings and FCF growth." Amazon "Going forward, we expect Amazon to leverage robots to: 1) reduce labor dependency; 2) increase order accuracy; and 3) improve warehouse efficiency, driving material cost savings. … Robotics could increase AMZN's competitive moats. … We think Amazon is well positioned to capitalize on the global growth of eCommerce and other secular trends such as cloud computing, online advertising and connected devices." Nvidia "AI demand/visibility remain strong, maintain Buy, top pick. … We maintain Buy, a top sector pick with a $180 PO as we believe NVDA remains best positioned to benefit from the ongoing AI tide, supported by a multi-year lead in performance (AI scaling), pipeline, incumbency, scale, and developer support." Boot Barn "We are encouraged that the acceleration in comp trends has been broad-based across major merchandise categories and geographies. This gives us confidence BOOT isn't overearning in a specific geography or category. … With larger scale comes better pricing, better selection, more exclusive brands, and better customer service." Philip Morris "PM has been a top performer in the US market this year, led by execution, improving profitability in smoke-free, ZYN/IQOS volumes and continued contribution from combustibles to support SF [smoke free] growth. Its lack of exposure to China, tariff swings and its defensive nature is also attractive. As we see PM as well positioned to navigate external volatility, we boost our PO by $18 to $200."

Stocks are on the verge of flashing 2 big sell signals as investors pile into the market at a historic pace, BofA says
Stocks are on the verge of flashing 2 big sell signals as investors pile into the market at a historic pace, BofA says

Business Insider

time10 hours ago

  • Business Insider

Stocks are on the verge of flashing 2 big sell signals as investors pile into the market at a historic pace, BofA says

Things have been good for stocks over the last two months. Maybe too good, according to a new report from Bank of America. Since its most recent low on April 8, the S&P 500 and Vanguard's Total World Stock Index are up 20% as investors have piled into the market at a near-record pace. On an annualized basis, 2025 has seen the second-highest inflows into global stocks ever, trailing only 2024, BofA's Chief Investment Strategist Michael Hartnett said in a client note Friday. For US stocks, it's the third-highest year ever, after 2024 and 2021. Yet, amid the bullish frenzy, Hartnett said global stocks are approaching two sell signals. The first is the amount of money flowing into global stock funds. If they hit 1% of their current assets under management within a four-week span, the sell signal is activated. Over the last four weeks, flows totaled 0.9% of the funds' AUM. To hit 1%, flows would have to hit $30 billion in the "coming weeks," Hartnett said. The second is a breadth indicator that says when 88% of the ACWI countries' indexes trade above both their 50-day and 200-day moving averages, it's a sign that things are frothy and investors should sell, Hartnett said. Currently, 84% of ACWI countries' indexes are higher than their moving averages, meaning the market is in "overbought territory," Hartnett said. Both of Hartnett's sell indicators are in line with the conventional wisdom of contrarian investing espoused by legends like Warren Buffett. When the market is overwhelmingly bullish, good news is already priced in. When investors are bearish, it's an opportunity to buy stocks at a discount, the thinking goes. But sentiment gauges have sent mixed signals over the last couple of months. While inflows are strong, the AAII Investor Sentiment Survey shows investors are still net bearish. Bank of America's own Bull/Bear indicator shows the market's aggregate attitude hovers somewhere between optimism and pessimism, with a slight tilt toward the former. Breadth indicators are broadly in line with Hartnett's measure. Stocks of all stripes are doing well. Like Hartnett, Liz Ann Sonders, the chief investment strategist at Charles Schwab, said in a May 27 report that the robust breadth levels could be a cause for concern in the near-term. "Early-April setup was ripe for rally on good news given washed out sentiment/breadth and deeply oversold market," she wrote in a note co-authored with Kevin Gordon, a senior strategist at Schwab. "Setup now is not at opposite extreme." While breadth and sentiment can be contrarian indicators, it should be noted that the momentum factor has been king over the last decade and a half. What has done well (mega-cap tech stocks and popular indexes) has continued to do well, and steep declines in the broader market have generally been short-lived. That could still be the case going forward. Beyond technical indicators, investors are also monitoring fundamental measures of the economy's health. The macroeconomic picture remains unclear as business owners and consumers digest President Trump's tariffs. Concerns persist about how the import taxes will affect consumer prices and growth. The US economy added 139,000 jobs in May, more than economists expected, but the number wasn't a sure sign that the labor market remains solid, as April and March data were revised down. Long-term Treasury yields also continue to rise as Trump's tax bill fuels investor concerns around inflation and the US budget deficit. A negative catalyst in the form of rising unemployment or higher inflation could spark a reversal in the ultra-bullish signals Hartnett is watching.

Will Amazon's robot delivery ambitions pay off?
Will Amazon's robot delivery ambitions pay off?

Yahoo

time21 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Will Amazon's robot delivery ambitions pay off?

-- Bank of America analysts suggest that Amazon (NASDAQ:AMZN)'s burgeoning ambitions in robot delivery could yield "billions in savings," despite acknowledging significant hurdles. The e-commerce giant is reportedly exploring the use of humanoid robots for package delivery, with internal testing already underway. According to a report cited by BofA, Amazon is designing "an indoor obstacle course for humanoid robots" to train them for package delivery. They note that a report indicates the robots could eventually "ride in the back of Rivian (NASDAQ:RIVN) vans before leaping out to deliver packages." While Amazon is developing the AI software, it is expected to "test several third-party hardware solutions," with one Unitree robot estimated at around $16,000 per unit. If successful, BofA notes there could be a "large financial incentive [for Amazon] to automate." However, BofA cautions that there are still "several hurdles likely to overcome." Similar to autonomous vehicles, they expect "several years of testing before trials could begin." Obtaining regulatory approval on a local basis would also be a challenge, limiting rapid geographic expansion. Furthermore, "consumer acceptance of robot delivery would likely take time," with BofA believing it would be "much easier to automate internal processes than external." Despite these challenges, BofA maintains its Buy rating on Amazon, anticipating a substantial long-term opportunity. Their analysis estimates that "robotics in delivery could drive over $7.1bn in annual savings by 2032," not including potential savings from humanoids. BofA also sees "leading robotics infrastructure" enabling Amazon to potentially move its first-party operations to profitability as a low-cost provider and further improve third-party shipping margins, ultimately driving its long-term retail margin opportunity to 11%. Related articles Will Amazon's robot delivery ambitions pay off? Jefferies upgrades Urban Outfitters to Hold, says risk/reward now balanced Melius upgrades Deere on long-term tech moat and recurring revenue upside Sign in to access your portfolio

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store