Pier 1 Imports — The Rattan Bazaar a Pandemic Closed for Good
Summary
Pier 1 Imports was the home-furnishings chain that turned a bohemian taste for imported wicker, scented candles, and the bowl-shaped Papasan chair into a national habit — and on May 19, 2020 it asked a bankruptcy court for permission to close every one of its remaining stores. Founded in 1962 in San Mateo, California (the company moved its headquarters to Fort Worth, Texas, by the mid-1960s), Pier 1 grew into one of the largest specialty home retailers in the United States, peaking at roughly 1,100 stores and sales approaching $2 billion. For a generation of first apartments and dorm rooms, it was where you bought the rattan chair, the bin of cheap glassware, the candle that made a rented room smell like an idea of somewhere else.
The chain had already filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy on February 17, 2020, hoping to slim down and find a buyer. Then the COVID-19 pandemic shut its stores in March, froze the sale process, and removed the one thing a court-supervised turnaround needed: time and foot traffic. With no buyer willing to take on a closed retail operation in the depths of the lockdown, Pier 1 converted its reorganization into a liquidation. The court approved the wind-down on May 30, 2020, and the last stores went dark by the end of October.
Pier 1's problem long predated the virus. Its merchandising niche — affordable, slightly exotic, of-the-moment home decor — was the exact territory that Amazon, Wayfair, HomeGoods, At Home, and Target spent the 2010s carving up. Pier 1 answered a structural threat with tactical discounting, training its customers to wait for the next promotion and grinding its margins toward zero. The pandemic did not invent the chain's troubles; it foreclosed the only exit Pier 1 had left.
What survived was a logo and a customer list. In June 2020, Retail Ecommerce Ventures — a holding company that buys distressed retail brands and reopens them as websites — acquired Pier 1's intellectual property for about $31 million. Pier1.com sells home goods to this day, but the stores, the smell of the candle aisle, and the roughly 1,000-store fleet that defined the brand are gone. The fate word is Liquidated because there was no reorganization to survive: the assets were sold and every store was closed.
Timeline
The Wicker Empire
Pier 1 began as a single store in 1962 selling the kind of imported goods — incense, love beads, floor cushions, woven baskets — that the era's young, restless, and broke could afford to make a room feel like a statement. Its genius was to industrialize that bohemian impulse. As it scaled across the country from its Fort Worth base, Pier 1 built a global sourcing operation that filled American strip malls with directly imported furniture and decor at prices the department stores could not match, sold in a warm, slightly cluttered, treasure-hunt environment. The Papasan chair — a round, cushioned bowl on a rattan base, sold by the hundreds of thousands — became a shorthand for the brand, the kind of object a customer did not know they wanted until they sat in one.
For decades the formula worked precisely because it occupied an unguarded middle. It was cheaper and more fun than a furniture store, more characterful than a discount chain, and it sold the constant novelty of imported goods that turned over with the seasons. By the mid-2000s Pier 1 was running on the order of 1,100 stores with sales near $2 billion, and after a brush with the 2008 recession it staged a credible recovery: by May 2013 its market value had climbed to roughly $2.7 billion. To a casual observer it looked like a retailer that had survived the worst. In fact it was sitting in the most dangerous spot in retail — a pleasant, undefended niche — at the precise moment the internet learned how to sell furniture.
The Race to the Bottom of the Coupon
The threat that ended Pier 1 was not a single rival but a category that filled in around it. Amazon made cheap, fast-shipped home goods a default. Wayfair built an entire business on the proposition that you would buy a sofa online from photographs. HomeGoods and At Home offered the same treasure-hunt thrill in larger, cheaper boxes, and Target made stylish home decor a routine errand. Pier 1's distinct value — affordable, of-the-moment imported decor — was suddenly available everywhere, often cheaper, and without the trip. The chain's e-commerce operation, launched late and never a strength, could not close the gap; for a business built on impulse and atmosphere, a website was a poor substitute and a costly afterthought.
Pier 1's response compounded the problem. Faced with a structural disadvantage, it reached for the most familiar lever in retail and the most corrosive: discounting. Promotions, coupons, and clearance markdowns became near-constant, and they did what relentless discounting always does — they trained customers never to pay full price and they ground gross margins toward nothing. The chain was selling roughly the same volume of goods for steadily less money, a trajectory no amount of cost-cutting could outrun. By the late 2010s Pier 1 was posting heavy losses, and in January 2020 it announced it would close up to 450 stores — nearly half its fleet — in a last attempt to shrink to a profitable core.
The February 2020 Chapter 11 filing was meant to finish that surgery under court protection and deliver a smaller, viable Pier 1 to a buyer. It was a reasonable plan with one fatal dependency: it needed the stores to be open. When the pandemic shut them in March, sales stopped, the going-concern value evaporated, and the prospective buyers walked. A retailer in bankruptcy can sometimes be saved; a retailer in bankruptcy whose stores are all closed, in a market where no one knows when they can reopen, cannot. The reorganization had nowhere to go but liquidation.
A Brand Without a Body
By late spring 2020 the question was no longer whether Pier 1 would emerge but how its carcass would be divided. On May 19 the company asked the court to approve winding down all remaining stores as soon as they could reopen; on May 30 the court agreed. Going-out-of-business sales ran through the summer and fall, and the last Pier 1 store closed by October 31, 2020. What had been a roughly 1,100-store chain at its height ended as empty boxes returned to landlords already bracing for a wave of pandemic-era vacancies.
The name did not quite die. In June 2020, Retail Ecommerce Ventures — the same buyer of distressed brands that had scooped up Modell's and others — paid about $31 million for Pier 1's intellectual property and relaunched it as an online-only retailer. Pier1.com still sells candles and home decor, but it is a website wearing the brand's clothes, not the company that filled American strip malls with rattan. The fate word Liquidated is precise: there was no surviving operating company, no reorganized chain, only assets sold and a logo licensed onward.
The Five Factors
Aftermath
Pier 1's liquidation eliminated the jobs of the workers who staffed roughly 540 stores at the time of the filing — store managers and associates already navigating a public-health emergency, told that the company they worked for would not reopen as an employer. The closures fed directly into the broader 2020 retail reckoning, in which the pandemic accelerated the demise of chains, like Pier 1, that were already structurally weak; J.C. Penney, Stein Mart, Lord & Taylor, and others followed the same arc that year. The empty Pier 1 boxes joined a glut of vacant retail space returned to landlords during the downturn.
The brand's afterlife is the now-familiar zombie pattern: bought cheaply by Retail Ecommerce Ventures and reanimated as a website that trades on memory rather than presence. Pier1.com sells home goods, but it is not the chain anyone remembers, and the buyer's own later financial troubles underscored how thin the value of a salvaged retail name can be. Pier 1's lasting mark is as a clean illustration of the decade's home-furnishings shakeout — a once-beloved specialty chain caught in an undefended middle, addicted to its own discounts, and finished off by a pandemic that turned a slow decline into an abrupt end.
Lessons
- Audit whether your niche is actually defensible: a comfortable, distinctive position that competitors and the internet can replicate is a temporary lead, not a moat, and it will be eroded from every side.
- Treat chronic discounting as the emergency it is — coupons that train customers never to pay full price and grind margins to zero are a liquidation conducted one markdown at a time.
- Build a genuine e-commerce engine before you need it, especially for an impulse, atmosphere-driven format; bolting on a website late and underfunded will not save a chain whose advantages do not survive the trip online.
- Recognize that a Chapter 11 reorganization depends on operating stores and going-concern value; a shock that closes the doors can turn a survivable restructuring into a forced liquidation, so carry the liquidity to withstand a demand stoppage.
- Do not mistake a salvaged brand name for a surviving business — a logo licensed onto a website is the residual value of a dead chain, not its second life.
References
- Pier 1 Imports to liquidate as soon as it can get its stores open The Spokesman-Review (Dallas Morning News wire)
- Pier 1 Demise Shows Bankruptcy in a Pandemic Means Gone for Good Bloomberg
- These retailers could be winners as Pier 1 shuts 50% of its stores CNBC
- Pier 1's moment of truth Retail Dive
- Pier 1 Imports Wikipedia