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Bed Bath & Beyond (NASDAQ: BBBY ) stock is due for delisting on May 3. The meeting meant to approve a reverse stock split on May 9 was canceled.
One of the strangest scenes in the saga of Bed Bath and Beyond Inc.'s bankruptcy played out outside the home goods retailer's store in Manhattan's Chelsea district Wednesday when a giant “dancing goose” celebrated the company's demise.
Bed, Bath & Beyond is having a mammoth going-out-of-business sale. Shoppers Mariel Correa and Jeanette Graciano, clutching a handful of the retailer's iconic blue-and-white 20% off coupons, weren't going to miss a minute of it.
A CNN analysis of the more than a dozen categories online shoppers can navigate on the Bed, Bath & Beyond website showed that the lion's share of the store's inventory was actually dedicated to the idea of "Beyond."
Bed Bath & Beyond (NASDAQ: BBBY ) stock is in the news today as the retail company is no longer accepting coupons as it prepares for store closings. Bed Bath & Beyond alerted customers that they would only have from Sunday through Tuesday to use their coupons for its store.
Longtime retail staples Bed Bath and Beyond and Buy Buy Baby are shutting their doors and will soon be in the Great Beyond. That said, the big box stores known for affordable housewares, home accessories, textiles and baby gear are going out with a bang: Starting April 26, the company says you can expect many (if not all) items to be on clearance sale at both Bed Bath and Beyond and Buy Buy Baby.
The fallout from Bed Bath & Beyond Inc.'s bankruptcy continues, with Moody's weighing the impact of the troubled home goods retailer's demise on commercial mortgage-backed securities (CMBS) loans.
The other shoe has officially dropped for Bed Bath & Beyond (NASDAQ: BBBY ) stock. As you've likely heard, the struggling retailer filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy on April 23.
It has been a rough stretch for Bed Bath & Beyond (NASDAQ: BBBY ), but that's what happens when a company files for bankruptcy. Indeed, BBBY stock has really taken it on the chin lately.
Bed, Bath & Beyond made plenty of mistakes that led to this week's bankruptcy filing. Among the most consequential was the $11.8 billion it has spent since 2004 to buy back its own shares.