Forever 21 is back on the auction block.
Once a formidable fast-fashion mall staple, Forever 21's parent company
filed for bankruptcy protection
The retailer has been a shell of its former self since it first filed for
bankruptcy in 2019
“We have been unable to find a sustainable path forward, given competition from foreign fast fashion companies ... as well as rising costs, economic challenges impacting our core customers, and evolving consumer trends,” Chief Financial Officer Brad Sell
said in a statement
Sell specifically called out a
tax loophole
Forever 21 — founded by Korean immigrants and long run as a family business — made it big in the early 2000s by making designer fashion accessible. It brought runway styles to mall shoppers at rock-bottom prices. Its store footprint grew fast and far, just as internet rivals began to eat its lunch.
After its 2019 bankruptcy, the chain was purchased by an unusual joint venture: Big mall operators Simon Property Group and Brookfield Property Partners teamed up with a firm called Authentic Brands Group, which
buys and resuscitates dying brands
Authentic Brands’ CEO later described his foray into once-fast-now-ultrafast fashion with Forever 21 as his “
biggest mistake
In 2023, Forever 21's new owners tried another maneuver,
signing a partnership with Shein
The company says its stores and website will keep running while executives figure out the chain’s future. Stores outside the U.S. are not part of the Chapter 11 filings.
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