TORONTO — When the doors to the flagship Hudson’s Bay store in Toronto opened Friday morning, a burst of customers entered on a mission to find one thing: deals.
Some jogged through the 675,700 square foot store on Yonge Street in hopes of getting first pick of the company’s famed stripes merchandise. Others made a beeline for the jewelry department, where they found themselves jockeying for attention for salespeople scrambling to keep up with requests for items behind their counters, which were all marked down by 70 per cent.
"Don't get distracted by the makeup. It's only 10 per cent off," shouted Jane Mazel to a friend as they speedwalked through the beauty department, intent on finding bigger markdowns on the appliances and cookware floor.
The scene was one of the latest signs of the fall of Canada's oldest company. It filed for creditor protection last month, citing trouble paying its bills because of the effects of the COVID-19 pandemic, an intensifying trade war and depressed downtown traffic.
To cope, it put itself up for sale and began liquidating all but six of its 96 Bay, Saks Fifth Avenue and Saks Off Fifth stores last month. While there are still a few days left to make a bid to save the business, the 355-year-old company is so unoptimistic it will find a savior, it decided to preemptively liquidate the last six locations.
In addition to the flagship, those stores include Yorkdale mall in Toronto and Hillcrest Mall in Richmond Hill, Ont., as well as downtown Montreal, Carrefour Laval mall and Pointe-Claire in Quebec.
The "everything must go" style selloff at those sites launched with discounts as high as 70 per cent and reminders that "all sales are final."
Jeff Valiquette, who frequents the store on lunch breaks, had heard deep discounts were coming and was in the jewelry department within a minute of it opening on Friday.
He was so zoned into his task – picking up gifts for his upcoming anniversary, a daughter graduating high school and another with a birthday on its way – that he barely noticed the competition around him.
While he was “very happy” with the bag of bling he walked off with, the shopping trip was tinged with sadness as well.
“I come here for everything. A lot of the furnishings in our house are from either the Bay or Simpsons (a defunct department store Hudson’s Bay bought in 1978) and my kitchen table that I bought when we were married 26 years ago is from the Bay. We're still using it today,” he recalled.
“It’s the death of the department store in Canada.”
This report by The Canadian Press was first published April 25, 2025.
Tara Deschamps, The Canadian Press