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Finance & Capital Management

  • Amazon buying Whole Foods Market

    In a blockbuster deal, online giant Amazon is acquiring Whole Foods Market in an all cash transaction valued at $13.7 billion, or $42 a share.    John Mackey, co-founder and CEO of Whole Foods, will remain CEO of the grocer after the deal closes. Stores will continue to operate under the Whole Foods banner, and the company's headquarters will remain in Austin, Texas.  
  • Commentary: Amazon-Whole Foods deal ‘potentially terrifying’ for other grocers

    The retail sector is used to change, but every so often an event occurs that shakes the industry to its core. Amazon's acquisition of Whole Foods is one of those.   On the surface, the purchase -- which comes with a $13.7 billion price tag -- is surprising. However, there is an inherent logic in the move which, in our view, brings benefits to both businesses.  
  • Home goods retailer turned hotel operator adds new location

    West Elm has announced the newest location for its fledgling West Elm Hotels portfolio.   The company, a division of Williams-Sonoma, is teaming up with Signature Development Group and Jordan Real Estate Investments to develop a hotel in Oakland, Calif. Expected to open in 2020, the hotel will be located in Oakland’s Uptown neighborhood, and will celebrate the rich diversity and history of the location.   
  • J. Crew clinches lender support to trim debt load

    J. Crew is entering into a deal that it expects will put it one step closer to improving its business.   The fashion retailer has won the support of more than 50% of its term loan holders to trim its $2 billion debt load and end intellectual property litigation. This was according to sources familiar with the situation, according to Reuters.  
  • Supermarket giant cuts profit outlook

    The Kroger Co. lowered its earnings guidance amid a decline in Q1 same-store sales as price competition in the supermarket industry intensifies.    Sales rose 4.9% to a better-than-expected $36.3 billion for the quarter ended May 20, up from $34.6 billion last year. Same-store sales excluding fuel declined 0.2%, the second consecutive quarter of decline.  
  • Report: Regional malls on the upswing since 2010

    Scads of national retail chains are seeing their concepts fade out, but regional malls are still firmly in the picture.   That’s the diagnosis put forth in a report titled “Why Mall Reuse is Just Beginning,” from the entrepreneur-driven real estate firm Transwestern. Some key data points include: *Regional malls have had positive net absorption since 2010, with the only blip in absorption occurring in 2009, at the height of the recession.
  • U.K. sporting goods chain acquires two U.S. retailers

    Sports Direct, the largest sporting goods retailer in the United Kingdom, has expanded its presence in the United States.   The company announced that it has completed its acquisition of Bob's Stores and Eastern Mountain Sports. It will initially operate a total of some 50 stores in the Northeast and five EMS outdoor adventure schools, along with e-commerce sites for both brands.   
  • Retail sales flat in May

    Cautious consumers kept spending in check in May.     Retail sales in May were essentially unchanged on a seasonally adjusted basis after an upwardly revised gain of 0.6% in April, according to the National Retail Federation. The NRF numbers exclude automobiles, gasoline stations and restaurants.   In May, sales were 5.3% above the year-ago level on an unadjusted basis and increased four percent on a 3-month moving average year-over-year.   
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