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Overstock.com is all-in on its Bed Bath & Beyond acquisition.
The online furniture and home furnishings retailer said it had completed its $21.5 million deal to acquire bankrupt Bed Bath & Beyond’s intellectual property and web domains. It also said it quickly planned to drop the Overstock name in Canada and the U.S. and rebrand its business under the Bed Bath & Beyond banner. Overstock has gone under its name going back to its founding in 1999.
“This acquisition is a significant and transformative step for us,” said Overstock CEO Jonathan Johnson in a press release. “Bed Bath & Beyond is an iconic consumer brand, well-known in the home retail marketplace. The combination of our winning asset-light business model and the high awareness and loyalty of the Bed Bath & Beyond brand will improve the customer experience and position the company for accelerated market share growth.”
Overstock, which last year completed a multiyear transition away from non-home categories to focus on furniture and furnishings for the home, uses a dropship network of about 2,600 suppliers to fulfill orders. It’s unclear how many of Bed Bath & Beyond’s previous vendors will come on board as Overstock changes names and adds bedding, bath and kitchen products to its mix.
The transition will happen quickly. Overstock plans to relaunch the Bed Bath & Beyond site in Canada within the week. It plans to follow that within weeks with a new site in the U.S., a new shopping app and loyalty program.
Overstock is rebranding its Club O loyalty program as Welcome Rewards, which will continue to offer five percent rewards that customers can redeem on all future purchases.
“Combining the strengths of the Overstock operational model and the Bed Bath & Beyond brand will create a powerful synergy,” Mr. Johnson said. “I’m excited for consumers to experience the new Bed Bath and an even bigger and better Beyond.”
Overstock is making this change at a challenging time for the company. It reported a 30 percent decline in net revenues in its 2022 fiscal year with a net loss of $35 million.
Mr. Johnson, in an interview earlier this year with RetailWire, said, “2022 was a really difficult time because so many in our industry had excess inventory and were in the process of liquidating it. That put real pressure on pricing downward.”
He also said pricing pressure would likely remain through the first half of 2023 as competitors work through their excess inventory.
The consumer pullback on discretionary purchases tied to persistent inflation has also worked against Overstock. The company posted a year-over-year sales decline of 29 percent in the first quarter with active customers on the site dropping 35 percent.
Mr. Johnson said there were positives to take from the results with revenue trending upward each month during the quarter. He also pointed to Overstock posting positive earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization in the quarter, the twelfth straight quarter it has done so.
Overstock’s preliminary forecast for the second quarter sees sales falling in the low 20 percent range.
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