The parent company for the preppy clothing retailer J.Crew said Monday it has filed for bankruptcy protection — the first major retailer to do so since the coronavirus pandemic began and caused businesses to close their doors.
J.Crew Group, which also operates the Madewell brand of clothing, estimated in a Chapter 11 bankruptcy filing in the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the Eastern District of Virginia that it had assets and liabilities of between $1 billion and $10 billion.
J.Crew’s lenders have agreed to convert $1.65 billion of its debt into equity, and the company has secured commitments for financing $400 million from its existing lenders, Anchorage Capital Group LLC, GSO Capital Partners and Davidson Kempner Capital Management LP, among others.
The company’s Madewell denim brand, which had been slated to begin public trading before the pandemic hit, is expected to remain part of the business. The company had hoped to use the proceeds of the initial public offering to pay down its debt.
J.Crew was in trouble before the seismic shifts in the retail industry brought on by the coronavirus business closings.
TPG Capital and Leonard Green & Partners acquired the company for $3 billion in 2011. Retail veteran Mickey Drexler led it for more than a decade, and it became a valued brand, spurred partially by former first lady Michelle Obama, who famously sported J.Crew slim skirts and cardigans in her eight years in the White House.
Drexler severed his ties with the retailer in January 2019.
J.Crew will continue to operate online during the bankruptcy proceedings, according to a statement on the J.Crew Group website.
The company said it hopes to reopen the bricks-and-mortar stores once coronavirus restrictions are lifted and it is safe to do so.