Early history The Myer retail group was founded by
Sidney Myer, who migrated from
Belarus to
Melbourne in 1899 after the height of
Victoria's gold rush, with very little money and little knowledge of
English to join his elder brother, Elcon Myer (1875–1938), who had left Russia two years earlier. They opened the first Myer store in
Bendigo on 1 November 1900. After prospering, they opened a second store in Bendigo in 1908. In 1911, Myer purchased the business of Wright and Neil,
Drapers, in
Bourke Street,
Melbourne, near the
General Post Office, and a new building was completed and opened in 1914. From this base, Myer built Australia's largest chain of department stores, and the only chain with stores in all Australian states. In 1918, the Doveton woollen mills at
Ballarat were purchased, and in 1921 a new building fronting Post Office Place was added at Melbourne and in the following years Myer purchased adjoining properties, eventually building a store known as the
Myer Emporium. The 1914 building had been designed by architects
HW & FB Tompkins, who went on to design all the extensions over the next 20 years. The Myer store expanded to
Lonsdale Street in the 1920s, and the Bourke Street frontage was expanded and rebuilt in 1933. The Myer Emporium grew with the purchase of the old established businesses of Robertson & Moffat and Stephens & Sons. In
Adelaide, in 1925, the company Myer SA Stores Ltd acquired a controlling interest in Marshall's department store and its shares continued to be listed on the Adelaide Stock Exchange until Myer Emporium Ltd made a successful takeover bid in 1966. A separate building in Queensberry Street, Melbourne, was put up in 1928, it was called Carlton Despatch, Myer had a large number of trucks that delivered items to the suburbs of Melbourne. People phoned the department that sold what they wanted. It was then sent to Carlton Despatch and delivered to peoples homes. They paid with a Myer Card, that put the amount on their account, that was sent to customers monthly. The
Collins Street businesses of T. Webb and Sons, china importers, and W. H. Rocke and Company, house furnishers, were bought and transferred to the Bourke Street building. By 1934, the public company had a paid-up capital of nearly £2.5 million. On the death of Sidney Myer in 1934, leadership of the company fell to briefly to
Lee Neil, who died a few months later, and thence to Elcon Myer. On the death of Elcon in 1938, leadership went to their nephew Norman Myer. Norman Myer led the company until his death in 1956. Myer grew by developing its own stores (becoming one of Australia's major property owners and developers in the process) and acquiring other department stores, including Adelaide's
Marshall's and Bell's (
Victor Harbor,
Mount Barker,
Murray Bridge,
Strathalbyn and
Tailem Bend) in South Australia, Western Australia's
Boans in 1984, Queensland's Barry & Roberts as well as
McWhirters of Brisbane's
Fortitude Valley in 1955 and Allan & Stark in 1959, in Victoria Paterson Powell Pty Ltd (Ballarat) in 1953, Morris Jacobs (
Geelong) in 1950, Bilson's (
Colac) and Shilliday's (
Mildura), and in New South Wales they acquired
Western Stores, McLean's Central Stores (
Lismore), Morley's (
Tweed Heads), Farmers & Co in 1961, Mortimer's (
Gosford) in 1968, P.G.Smith & Regans (
Tamworth) in 1953 and
Grace Bros in 1983.
Target and Grace Bros In 1968, Myer acquired Lindsay's stores in
Geelong, renaming the business
Target, positioning it as a
discount department store chain. The core business of the company began to expand even further with the purchase of liquor retailers (San Remo and
Crittendens) and fast food outlets (
Red Rooster). In 1983, Grace Bros bought Myer in New South Wales, and then in July of that year Myer acquired Grace Bros Holdings Ltd. The Myer store on
Market and
Pitt Streets in Sydney became the main Grace Bros store. In 1984, Myer acquired
Boans, the dominant Western Australian department store chain and embarked on a major redevelopment of its
Perth City Store.
Merger with GJ Coles In 1985 the Myer Emporium (and Target, its discount department store) merged with GJ Coles & Coy forming
Coles Myer, then Australia's largest retailer. Myer remained a distinct entity within the new corporate structure until it was sold in 2006. In 2000, Coles Myer CEO Dennis Eck, faced with lower sales and profits from Myer and Grace Bros stores took the department stores down market, reducing service levels, increasing stock volumes on the selling floor and introducing product to appeal to younger consumers. In doing so, he ended up replicating the approach of another of Coles Myer's chains, Target. The resulting effect included reduced customer visits and reduced units sold per transaction. In 2001, Coles Myer set about to reposition the store to appeal to customers lost in the down market experiment. In 2003, one of the key changes made by the recently appointed Managing Director, Dawn Robertson, was to classify each Myer Grace Bros store using a grid system referencing the socio-economic status of the area, its turnover and growth potential. Larger city-centre stores would rank at the top of the grid and smaller regional stores would rank at the bottom of the grid. The grid would affect the merchandise allocated to each store, rather than selling the same range of product in downtown Melbourne as in regional Queensland. On 13 February 2004, Grace Bros stores were re-branded as Myer. In April 2004, Myer re-opened its
Bondi Junction, store which replaced a former Grace Bros store closed in April 2002 to make way for the redevelopment of
Westfield Bondi Junction. It was the first Myer store to open in several years and incorporated new features such as white glossy floor tiles, extensive use of glass, and greater use of mannequins. Under managing director Dawn Robertson, Myer began to target the Sydney market more strongly, to challenge the position of chief rival
David Jones particularly in ladies fashion. In February 2004, Myer held its Sydney fashion parade the day before David Jones. On 9 August 2004, Myer staged a fashion parade open-air in
Martin Place, gaining widespread attention, and again it was held the day before David Jones' show.
Divestment by Coles Myer On 17 August 2005, Coles Myer announced that within 12 months, it would decide to demerge, divest or retain Myer. Thirteen expressions of interest were made for all or part of Myer. On 13 March 2006, Coles Myer announced it would sell Myer to a consortium controlled by US private equity group
Newbridge Capital. The consortium also included the Myer family, who held a 5% stake. The new owners, who also secured the freehold on the flagship Bourke Street store, indicated that they would not radically change the business, at least in the short term, and had no plans to redevelop the Bourke Street site as this would impact too heavily on profitability during the construction period. Texas Pacific also had interests in UK department store
Debenhams and high-end US retailer
Neiman Marcus. This sale was completed for A$1.4 bn on 2 June 2006.
Private ownership After being divested from Coles Myer (later
Coles Group, then purchased by
Wesfarmers), new owners Newbridge Capital and the Myer family appointed chairman Bill Wavish and chief executive Bernie Brookes, both formerly of
Woolworths.
Rupert Myer joined the board representing the Myer family. Head office for Myer, moved from
Coles Myer head office in
Hawthorn East back to Lonsdale House (Lonsdale Street store) in Melbourne's CBD. Beginning July 2006, Myer held a "History Making Clearance" to clear out excess stock deemed either unprofitable or unpopular, and reduced inventories from $1.5 billion to $750 million, and all store-specific warehouses were closed. Former
Miss Universe Jennifer Hawkins began appearing in campaigns for Myer in 2006 and in January 2007 signed a $4 million deal to be the "face" of Myer for four years. Myer withdrew from the Coles Group part-owned
flybuys rewards program on 1 February 2007. In March 2007, Myer announced first half earnings before interest and tax (EBIT) of $123 million, an increase of 84% on the previous year. This represents a profit margin of 6.8%, compared with 3.9% in the previous corresponding period. According to chairman Bill Wavish, all Myer stores were now profitable, and all stores were more profitable than in the previous year. Myer acquired four
Harris Scarfe stores (including regaining a store it divested to Harris Scarfe in 1998) and took a minority shareholding in Harris Scarfe. The Mymerch system, developed with
IBM and Oracle, cost $99 million and was implemented early April 2007. Among other functions, Mymerch increased Myer's ability to carry out statistical analysis of customer habits giving it greater capacity to forecast sales trends and target promotions. Myer's profit turnaround was tempered in April 2007 by the loss of key staff. Bob Boutin, apparel director, Mark Bingemann, women's wear business manager and Jasmine Bingemann,
footwear and
accessories manager all resigned within a short period. This followed reports of management dissatisfaction over the direction of the
fashion business signified by the defection of designers such as
Alex Perry and
Tigerlily to
David Jones. In June 2007, a consortium comprising the Myer family,
Colonial First State and
GIC Real Estate (Singapore) announced it would be purchasing Myer's Melbourne CBD store. The Bourke Street part of the store was planned to be redeveloped by 2009, with Myer taking a 60-year lease, but the development was not completed until March 2011. The Lonsdale Street part of the store closed in 2009.
Public company In September 2009, following rumours from the previous month, Myer indicated it would float the business at an indicative share price range of $3.90 to $4.90 when it listed on 2 November, giving it a market capitalisation between $2.3 billion and $2.8 billion. The final issue price was $4.10, but by August 2011 the shares had fallen to $2.09. In 2010, Myer's re-developed Bourke Street mall store opened, becoming the company's new flagship store. Head office moved to a new site in
Docklands. The historic Lonsdale Street store was officially closed. In early 2011, Myer purchased a 65% stake in Australian women's fashion label
Sass & Bide for A$42.25 million. In October 2013, Myer purchased the remaining 35% of the business for $30 million. In January 2014, it was revealed by
Fairfax Media that Myer had made a bid to purchase and merge with department store rival
David Jones. The merger would have kept both chains operating independently on the surface, combining back-office and supply chain operations saving both companies an estimated $5 billion per year. The $3 billion non-binding indicative proposal was made to the David Jones board of directors in late October 2013, however was rejected by the board in November 2013. In February 2014, Myer reapproached David Jones, offering to purchase David Jones at market value (estimated to be 1.7 billion). David Jones had not yet commented on the new proposal, when food and clothing retailer,
Woolworths South Africa offered to purchase David Jones, by way of a scheme implementation deed, in which shareholders of David Jones would be offered $4-per-share. In response to the Woolworths deal, Myer withdrew their proposal to David Jones. Myer's long serving CEO Bernie Brookes, whose strategy was to clean up the business and develop efficiency strategies, announced his departure in March 2015. In September 2015, as part of an outcome from the 2015 strategic review, a $221mn capital raising was announced. The resulting dilution of shareholder value in conjunction with little support for the actions in the strategic plan saw the share price decline to $0.91. In April 2017, Myer acquired two fashion brands—Marcs and David Lawrence—after they were placed in voluntary administration. On 27 March 2020, Myer announced it would be temporarily closing down all of its stores from the close of business 29 March 2020 for a period of four weeks, standing down 10,000+ staff members, as a result of the
COVID-19 pandemic. Myer continued to operate their online store, with no contact delivery available and click & collect at certain stores. Myer announced a plan to re-open all stores by 30 May 2020. In June 2024, Olivia Wirth, became the company's executive chair. In late October 2024, Myer announced they had reached a deal to buy
Premier Investments'
Apparel Brands division (comprising the fashion brands Just Jeans, Jay Jays, Jacqui E, Portmans and Dotti). As part of the transaction, Myer issued new shares (worth $863.78 million) to Premier Investments, while Premier contributed $82 million to the business.
Solomon Lew joined the Myer board as a non-executive director. The brands became part of Myer in January 2025 after the deal received shareholder approval. ==Stores and services==