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West Marine filing for bankruptcy?

Discussion in 'General Yachting Discussion' started by YachtForums, May 5, 2026.

  1. Trinimax

    Trinimax Senior Member

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    I live in Trinidad and travel to Lauderdale once a year or so, and I used to check westmarine for certain items when I visited as its cheaper than the islands. However as others have said they usually dont have the small miscellanous parts in stock, so I have started ordering stuff on amazon and sending to a hotel.

    they used to be good for electronics atleast for the most part
  2. Capt Ralph

    Capt Ralph Senior Member

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    West Marine is headquartered in Fort Lauderdale, where this 50,000-square-foot flagship store is also located.

    Americas biggest marine supply store, West Marine filed for bankuptcy protection yesterday in Delaware as the result of run-of-the-mill corporate greed, online competition and the end of the post-Covid boat-buying bump.

    A box in the filing was checked off to indicate estimated liabilities of $500 million to $1 billion. The top 30 unsecured claims against the company total more than $66 million.

    The news release assured customers that West Marine would remain open for business during its reorganization, though less profitable stores are likely to be closed:

    Customers will continue to have access to their favorite marine products through the Company’s approximately 200 retail locations across 34 states and Puerto Rico, online platforms, and the West Marine Pro App.

    According to West Marine the restructuring will allow the company “to delever its capital structure while maximizing value and ensuring continued service to the boating community.” One assumes that means reducing debt.

    Founded in 1968 as a “discount retailer,” West Marine hummed along right along through the new millenium, buying up 66 stores from its only national competitor, BoatU.S., in 2003. After that, the company became a national monopoly with only a few regional chains for competition.

    The emphasis on “discount” waned. “We lost our compass or our altimeter when we bought BoatU.S.,” one retired executive said. “It was the beginning of the boutique West Marines, the most expensive place in town, which wasn’t our origin story.”

    And in 2017, West Marine went from publicly traded to private after a $338 million leveraged buyout by private equity firm Monomoy Capital Partners, a New York firm with more than $5 billion in assets. L Catterton, the largest global consumer-focused private equity firm in the world, took a controlling stake in 2021.

    One of the most knowledgable observers of this history is John Moore, editor of Powerboat News. Moore takes up the story:

    In late 2023, the company completed an out-of-court debt restructuring involving approximately $800 million in debt. L Catterton injected roughly two-thirds of a reported $150 million capital infusion, subordinated some of its own debt, and Oaktree Capital Management gained joint control as part of the arrangement. The company is currently jointly controlled by Oaktree Capital Management and L Catterton.

    That 2023 deal did not resolve the underlying pressures. Ongoing trading difficulties through 2025 and into 2026 have brought the company back to restructuring discussions.

    The $800 million was not accumulated through years of trading losses. It was loaded onto West Marine’s balance sheet when Monomoy Capital Partners bought the company in 2017 using a leveraged buyout. In that structure, the acquiring firm borrows heavily against the target company’s assets—its stores, inventory and brand—and the debt sits on the company’s books, serviced from its own trading cash flow. West Marine effectively became responsible for financing its own acquisition.

    The model works when revenue is strong and borrowing costs are low. Both conditions held through much of 2018 to 2021, including a pandemic-era surge in boating activity. When interest rates rose sharply from 2022, the cost of servicing that debt increased at the same time as consumer spending on discretionary items began to soften. The 2023 restructuring injected fresh capital and bought time, but did not reduce the overall debt load to a level the business could comfortably carry through a prolonged sales slowdown.

    For a retailer with a large physical footprint, the combination is particularly punishing. Store leases are long-term fixed commitments. When sales fall, the cost base does not fall with them.

    Amazon and other online sources for marine parts steadily grew. West Marine customers, who had been grumbling about store prices for years, now grumbled because shelves were not being restocked, and in the case of items normally bought in pairs or groups, often only one could be had. There was less emphasis on the nuts and bolts of boating, more on fashion accessories.

    Against a backdrop of routine private-equity greed, the post-Covid boatbuilding bump ended. Consumer spending for luxury goods slackened under inflationary pressure. Consumer confidence fell to record lows as a result of the Iran War. Cheaper online options proliferated.

    Suddenly, West Marine’s ambitious but fragile business model had become unsustainable.

    Attached Files:

  3. RER

    RER Senior Member

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    Reminds me of The Sopranos when Tony "busts out" his neighbor's sporting goods store. I don't really see any difference.
  4. Pascal

    Pascal Senior Member

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    Wasn’t a chain named E&B Marine which West bought out in the late 80s to expand on the east coast?
  5. Capt Ralph

    Capt Ralph Senior Member

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    Back then it was a BoatUS store. Around the corner was the other. They hated me when I came in and said the other store was cheaper.
    When the new West Marine stores opened and/or re-branded, the E&B stores were gone.

    Tap on the old D&B web site (https://www.dnb.com/business-direct...ine_inc.73bf8d02698679f8f926aa0e0cffba58.html) ,, it goes to WM.
  6. boatpoor

    boatpoor Senior Member

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    In the nineties we had a Boaters World and 3 West Marine stones within a 5 mile drive in addition to our locally owned supply houses. Now we have one understocked West Marine but fortunately our local stores survived.
  7. Capt Ralph

    Capt Ralph Senior Member

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    8 Florida West Marine Stores Closing (Nationwide List)
    Five Each in Michigan, Washington and California; Bonuses for Execs
    Peter Swanson

    Jun 11

    Florida got hit the worst as a bankrupt West Marine closes 56 stores nationwide. As the headline says, Michigan, Washington and California followed with five closings in each.

    Additionally four stores each in Maryland and South Carolina, and three stores in Ohio and New Jersey. In all, 23 states lost at least one store. (List below)

    Meanwhile Trade Only Today is reporting that company’s former chief executive officer received a $1.2 million bonus and that current CEO Paulee Day received an undisclosed amount of “retention bonus” money 16 days before the company filed for bankruptcy in mid-May.

    List of Stores To Close
    [​IMG]
  8. YachtForums

    YachtForums Administrator

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    A fantastic opportunity for online marine retailers to fill the void.
  9. MBevins

    MBevins Senior Member

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    I believe they already helped WM get to this point.
    d_meister and YachtForums like this.
  10. Pascal

    Pascal Senior Member

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    I can see why the Knoxville TN store isn’t working out… always empty. Too bad it was right across from Traders Joe so we could kill two birds with one stone. I
    Still haven’t found a good chandler up there, only toon dealers with 3” fenders and 1/8” dock lines :).

    Here in miami I wish the local independent stores would step up to the plate
  11. Capt J

    Capt J Senior Member

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    They drove WM to this point. The problem with online is, I'm working on a job today on a yacht, and probably 2-5 on other yachts. I want the parts today if I run into something I need, so I can complete the job and not have to go back. Sometimes it's only a bolt, some 5200, a light bulb, or float switch and that's where WM comes in handy, plus I get the same PRO discount at any WM store. So if I'm in Aventura, or Boca or etc., I can run in the store and grab something I might have missed, go right back to the boat and finish it.......that is if the local WM even has it. LOLOLOL
  12. Capt Ralph

    Capt Ralph Senior Member

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    I remember the S Fernandina/O'Neil store a couple of years ago.
    One of the FLA stores that is closing.
    I do believe the only shop around.
    Lots of floor space.
    I needed some electrical supplies, nothing here.

    I had to go to a NAPA shop and they had everything I needed. After my Corp discount there, maybe cheaper than Port/WM.

    I'm convinced that store's failure is from bad management and decisions. Other than Walmart and NAPA, there is no other shop around.

    But I still tap on Port/WM first. Here in the swamps, I order on-line from Port/WM for most of my needs.
    Usually delivered the next morning (FREE) from the hub, an hour aweigh. Yep, I remain a big fan ☺☺.
    Last edited: Jun 12, 2026 at 12:39 PM
  13. Norseman

    Norseman Senior Member

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    Agree 100%, WM was/is darn convenient, not only because I owned 2 boats and a charter company in Fort Lauderdale but also because I managed several other boats at the same time and did almost daily trips to the Flagship store and knew several employees by first name, same with Sailorman and ACE hardware on SR 84, almost family.
    My new hometown Palm Coast @ Flagler Beach will lose the small but friendly WM store shortly.
    R.I.P WM, I was a customer back in 1985 on St. Thomas and kept drooling at the big fat catalog showing all the goodies I couldn’t afford back then, about 10 or 11 boats ago not counting tenders.:cool:
  14. Capt Ralph

    Capt Ralph Senior Member

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    Sorry brother, I did not see the Palm Coast shop on the list.
    Amazing, They also chopped the JaxBeach shop. I thought that was a solid store.
    The St Aug shop had to be close to the chopping block also if these two stores were axed.
  15. Norseman

    Norseman Senior Member

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    Story of my life..:(