Saks Bond Debacle Delivers Penny-Price Lessons to Hedge Funds

TL;DR Summary
Saks Global Enterprises filed for Chapter 11 after a cash bleed from its Neiman Marcus deal, leaving distressed bonds once snapped up by hedge funds trading at pennies on the dollar. The post-bankruptcy financing package totals about $1.75 billion (including $1.5 billion from senior secured lenders), which could support a turnaround, but recoveries for unsecured creditors and equity holders remain highly uncertain as lenders weigh their bets and challengers like Amazon push back on funding access. This episode underscores the risk of “catching a falling knife” in debt markets.
- Saks Bonds Worth Just 1 Cent Hand Hedge Funds a Painful Lesson Bloomberg.com
- Amazon threatens 'drastic' action after Saks bankruptcy, says $475M stake is now worthless CNBC
- Death of a dream: Saks’ crisis exposes luxury department store woes Financial Times
- As Saks enters bankruptcy, have its Boston stores gone out of fashion? The Boston Globe
- After Saks’s Collapse—a Bitter Rift With Amazon The Wall Street Journal
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