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<h1>Retail defaults in 2018 could outpace last year</h1>
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<h4 class="hide-small byline-show-large">AUTHOR</h4>
<div class="author-name"><a href="https://www.retaildive.com/editors/bunglesbee/" rel="author">Ben Unglesbee</a><a class="twitter hide-small byline-show-large" href="https://www.twitter.com/Ben_RetailDive">@Ben_RetailDive</a></div>
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<h4 class="hide-small byline-show-large">PUBLISHED</h4>
<p>March 2, 2018</p></div>
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<h3>Dive Brief:</h3>
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<li>Despite strong holiday sales across much of the industry, analysts with ratings agency S&amp;P Global still have a negative view of the retail sector and cautioned that defaults could  &#8220;could match or exceed&#8221; those in 2017, when <a href="https://www.retaildive.com/news/retail-bankruptcies-2017/446086/">retail bankruptcies</a> surpassed the recession period.</li>
<li>To date, S&amp;P has issued 11 credit downgrades for retailers, with three defaults, and has negative outlooks for 34% of the sector it covers, according to a report emailed to Retail Dive. In all for 2017, S&amp;P counted 75 downgrades and 11 defaults.</li>
<li>Analysts led by Robert Schulz pointed to several danger points, including approaching debt maturities ($5.6 billion in 2018 and then $13 billion in 2019), shifting consumer spending, the &#8220;dangerous lag&#8221; of some retailers behind their competitors, a surplus of stores and highly leveraged balance sheets — dating back to &#8220;dozens of <a href="https://www.retaildive.com/news/private-equity-and-retail-a-match-made-for-striking/446836/">private equity buyouts</a> over the past decade.&#8221; S&amp;P also said that <a href="https://www.retaildive.com/news/alixpartners-liquidation-is-the-norm-for-bankrupt-retailers/506817/">business liquidations in retail</a> could pick up this year, with <a href="https://www.retaildive.com/news/how-bon-ton-came-to-the-brink-of-bankruptcy/515156/">Bon-Ton</a> (which <a href="https://www.retaildive.com/news/bon-ton-files-for-chapter-11/516299/">filed for bankruptcy in February</a>) being potentially &#8220;the first department store to liquidate in a number of years.&#8221;</li>
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<p><img src="https://engine.adzerk.net/i.gif?e=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&amp;s=fpQoftA0J6aEzlGAK02Lh3ogXZk" width="0px" height="0px" border="0" /></div>
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<h3>Dive Insight:</h3>
<p>As much as retailers might hate or <a href="https://www.retaildive.com/news/looking-at-the-reverse-of-the-reverse-why-2017-wasnt-all-bad/514923/">reject the term &#8220;retail apocalypse,&#8221;</a> it described something real in the world.</p>
<p>There are a lot of retailers out there with heaps of debt — many if not most from <a href="https://www.retaildive.com/news/private-equity-and-retail-a-match-made-for-striking/446836/">private equity buyouts</a> — that don’t have the safety net for changes in mall traffic and shifts to e-commerce. They can’t compete on price or value with discounters and off-pricers, and they haven’t been able to invest in their business.</p>
<p>(Toys R Us, last year’s largest retail bankruptcy and the third largest in history, is a near-perfect case of <a href="https://www.retaildive.com/news/toys-r-us-could-close-more-stores-or-liquidate/517440/">what has gone wrong</a> for numerous retailers over the past two years.)</p>
<p>Last year saw the orderly reorganization of several retailers in Chapter 11, among them <a href="https://www.retaildive.com/news/payless-is-the-first-of-its-peers-to-exit-bankruptcy-now-what/503792/">Payless</a>, <a href="https://www.retaildive.com/news/update-gymboree-exits-bankruptcy/504561/">Gymboree</a>, <a href="https://www.retaildive.com/news/rue21-emerges-from-bankruptcy-with-420-fewer-stores/505737/">rue21</a> and <a href="https://www.retaildive.com/news/true-religion-exits-bankruptcy-shedding-358m-in-debt/508462/">True Religion</a>, all of which entered and exited bankruptcy within the year and made changes to the business they said would better position them for the future.</p>
<p>But that’s not always the case. History <a href="https://www.retaildive.com/news/alixpartners-liquidation-is-the-norm-for-bankrupt-retailers/506817/">favors retail liquidation</a>, and retailers facing bankruptcy need to find lenders and other stakeholders willing to back the business beyond bankruptcy. And those stakeholders need to believe in the business. As <a href="https://www.retaildive.com/news/bon-ton-wins-725m-loan-as-some-press-for-liquidation/516508/">the case of Bon-Ton illustrates</a>, there are frequently stakeholders that think a retailer’s inventory and assets are worth more than the business as a going concern.</p>
<p>Changes from the recent tax bill could also cause problems for debt-laden retailers. In a recent report from law firm Arent Fox, authors found that a new cap on interest deductions &#8220;will cause distress to highly leveraged retailers.&#8221; It could also reduce leverage levels in future private equity buyouts, according to Arent Fox.</p>
<p>That might be good news for the sector, in the long run.</p>
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