Saks' Deep Price Cuts Changed All the Rules

Even high-end shoppers have gotten a taste for bargains
By Jim O'Neill,  Newser Staff
Posted Feb 9, 2009 9:49 AM CST
Saks' Deep Price Cuts Changed All the Rules
A shopper passes a window display at Saks Fifth Ave. department store Wednesday, Feb. 4, 2009 in New York.   (AP Photo/Mark Lennihan)

When Saks Fifth Avenue slashed prices 70% in November to kickstart a stalled holiday shopping season, it changed the rules for the entire luxe market, reports the Wall Street Journal. Retailers like Neiman Marcus and Barney's followed suit, putting an end to the unwritten deal the stores had with designers: Sell at full price for 2 months; don't discount until the end of the season.

But that rule doesn't work in times like these, and the change has designers worried—and considering holding back prime merchandise to sell at full price in their own stores. But customers who have gotten a taste of deep discounts may be unwilling to pay full price—which translates into a fat 50%-or-more profit margin—in the future. "I am so shocked that I ever did pay full price," says one shopper who snagged a $1,000 Badgley Mischka gown for $290. "I could never do that again."
(More recession stories.)

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