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Eddie Bauer to Close All California Stores After Bankruptcy Buyer Hunt Fails
11 March 2026
2 mins read

Eddie Bauer to Close All California Stores After Bankruptcy Buyer Hunt Fails

SAN FRANCISCO, March 10, 2026, 15:49 PDT

Eddie Bauer will shut down all 13 of its California locations after the retail operator came up empty-handed on a buyer during bankruptcy proceedings, speeding up plans to shrink the brand’s North American presence. Without a bid by the March 3 deadline, the scheduled March 6 auction was canceled. Now, the company is trying to offload around 174 store leases across the U.S. and Canada as liquidation sales roll on.

Shoppers have only until Thursday, March 12, to use gift cards or loyalty credits before those options disappear—after that, nothing gets returned or exchanged. Among the Bay Area locations on the list: Corte Madera, Milpitas, Gilroy, Petaluma, and Vacaville.

Eddie Bauer LLC, which oversees the brand’s stores in the U.S. and Canada, said no qualified buyers emerged before the court-set deadline. The retailer filed for Chapter 11 on Feb. 9, citing weaker sales, supply-chain snags, inflation, and tariff worries. That process allows companies to keep operating as they restructure or sell assets.

Marc Rosen, the CEO of Catalyst Brands, described the bankruptcy filing as a tough call. “This is not an easy decision,” Rosen said. He pointed out that Eddie Bauer’s e-commerce and wholesale units had already moved to Outdoor 5, and said the team is focused on safeguarding value and liquidity. Business Wire

The bankruptcy filing affects only the store operator; it doesn’t touch the Eddie Bauer brand itself. Authentic Brands Group retains ownership of Eddie Bauer’s intellectual property, while Outdoor 5 now manages e-commerce, wholesale, design, and product development for the U.S. and Canada. “Expanding its digital and wholesale reach” and a return to outdoor roots are key priorities, said David Brooks, executive vice president at Authentic. Authentic Brands Group

As of publication, California still had 13 Eddie Bauer stores, with sites in Corte Madera, Fresno, and San Clemente among them. Local coverage noted that staff in several of these spots hadn’t received any firm timeline for closures, but shoppers were already seeing clearance signs across much of the inventory.

The retreat comes as the outdoor-apparel sector gets squeezed. Brands like Patagonia, Arc’teryx, and Vuori have been ramping up direct-to-consumer efforts, pushing more sales on their own sites and in branded shops—attracting a younger crowd in the process. Back in 2001, Eddie Bauer operated close to 600 stores at its height.

RCS Real Estate Advisors, now handling the leases, says the collection covers over 1.08 million square feet—think malls, lifestyle centers, high-traffic shopping strips. Ivan Friedman, who serves as president and chief executive at the firm, described it as a “rare opportunity” for retailers in need of turnkey locations. RCS Real Estate Advisors

But it’s not a done deal yet. Court documents indicate store-closing sales are moving ahead unless a superior offer shows up. Without a late bid, landlords are left seeking replacements for over 1.08 million square feet once occupied by Eddie Bauer, and California stands to lose the brand altogether.

Eddie Bauer, which started out in Seattle back in 1920, invented and patented the quilted down “Skyliner” jacket two decades later, in 1940. When it filed, the retailer was carrying about $1.7 billion in debt. This isn’t its first brush with bankruptcy—Eddie Bauer also filed in 2009. Reuters

Stock Market Today

  • Shoulder Innovations Q1 Earnings Boost Shares Amid Mixed Forecasts
    May 16, 2026, 10:59 AM EDT. Shoulder Innovations, Inc. (NYSE:SI) shares rose 18% to $15.63 after its first-quarter revenue beat forecasts by 15%, reaching $17 million. Despite continued losses, the $0.41 per share loss met expectations. Analysts project 2026 revenues of $67.3 million, a 25% increase from the past year, while losses are expected to shrink 20% to $1.70 per share. The consensus price target remains steady at $21.25, reflecting confidence in the company's long-term value despite anticipated higher losses. Revenue growth is predicted to slow compared to last year but still outpace the industry average of 8%. Analyst price targets range narrowly from $19.00 to $24.00, indicating a convergent outlook on Shoulder Innovations' prospects.

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