Barington Capital Group Calls on Macy’s to Make Changes to Its Capital Allocation Plan to Improve Shareholder Value

Believes Macy’s Shares are Undervalued and Do Not Reflect the Upside Potential in its Strategic Plan or the Attractiveness of its Luxury Operations and Owned Real Estate Assets

Believes Macy’s Needs to Form a Separate Real Estate Subsidiary to Optimize the Value Potential of its Real Estate Portfolio

Believes Macy’s Needs to Significantly Reduce Capital Expenditures; After a Decade of Massive Spending Has Failed to Deliver Value Creation for Stockholders

Believes Macy’s Needs to Aggressively Repurchase its Shares, as its Stock Now Represents its Best Investment

Publishes Detailed Presentation on https://barington.com/macys

NEW YORK, December 09, 2024--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Barington Capital Group, L.P. and Thor Equities LLC and their respective affiliates ("Barington," "Thor," or "we"), who are shareholders of Macy’s, Inc. (NYSE: M) ("Macy’s" or the "Company"), published a detailed presentation today recommending that Macy’s make changes to its capital allocation strategy and consider other structural actions to improve shareholder value.

Due to long-term challenges in the department store sector and previous management missteps, Macy’s valuation has suffered markedly over the past decade with its shares down approximately 70%.1 Despite numerous attempts at implementing strategic plans under multiple leadership teams to overhaul Macy’s value proposition, the one constant of all these ineffective actions has been Macy’s reliance on spending enormous amounts of the Company’s cash flows on capital expenditure projects. Unfortunately, these capital expenditures or actions focused on merchandising initiatives, cost reductions and store closures have delivered limited sustainable improvements to Macy’s operating results.

Earlier this year, Macy’s announced a new strategic plan, called "A Bold New Chapter," under the leadership of the Company’s recently appointed CEO, Tony Spring. We see early promise in the new plan, as it calls for the closure of a significant number of very low productivity Macy’s nameplate locations. We believe this action, coupled with further cost reductions the Company plans to enact, will result in a healthier store base that can begin to deliver consistent revenue growth and profit improvements. Investors, not surprisingly, have failed to embrace the plan with Macy’s shares down approximately 13% since the plan’s announcement.1 As a result, Macy’s current valuation multiples of 3.6x NTM consensus EBITDA and 6.4x NTM consensus EPS are near all-time lows.2