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Labor & Employment

  • CBL malls to close on Thanksgiving

    When holiday shopping madness kicks off on Thanksgiving Day, at least 121 malls will be sitting on the sidelines.
  • Upscale home furnishings retailer repays second lien term loan

    RH has repaid its second lien term loan — in just over three months after securing it.
  • Sears Canada is going out of business

    It’s closing time for Sears Canada.
  • Regulatory Wrap-Up: National campaigns for higher wages and benefits are alive and well

    Updates on the very latest legislative developments affecting retail, including wages, health care, taxes, security, and more.
  • Chapter 22: Why Some Retailers Emerge from Bankruptcy Only to File Again

    As of August 31, 16 retailers have filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy in 2017. Four of those sixteen retailers are filing for “Chapter 22”, meaning this is their second time declaring bankruptcy. Chapter 22 cases show that the first bankruptcy failed and that the firm and its advisors were too optimistic regarding the firm’s viability out of bankruptcy. The chart below summarizes the four Chapter 22 filings over the past year:  
  • Embattled department store retailer gets fresh cash infusion from owner

    As it heads into its most important selling season, Sears Holding Corp. is receiving another cash infusion from its CEO and largest shareholder.   Sears is borrowing $100 million from units of CEO Eddie Lampert's hedge fund ESL Investments for "general corporate purposes," according to a regulatory filing. The new infusion brings the total of Lampert's outstanding loans to Sears to $499.4 million.   
  • Amazon gets bill for back taxes

    The European Union has hit Amazon with a tax bill.    The online giant was ordered to pay 250 million euros ($294 million) plus interest in back taxes to Luxembourg on Wednesday after the European Commission said the retailer had received illegal tax benefits.   "Luxembourg gave illegal tax benefits to Amazon. As a result, almost three quarters of Amazon's profits were not taxed," Margrethe Vestager, the EU's commissioner for competition, said in a statement.  
  • Small retailer with devoted fans is closing its doors

    A New England-based retailer that has the distinction of being the first curtain catalog company is closing up shop.    Shareholders of The Fitzpatrick Companies, whose subsidiaries include Country Curtains, voted Wednesday to liquidate the 61-year-old business. Country Curtains will begin liquidating operations immediately, and a going-out-of-business sale will be launched in its 19 retail stores (and website) starting on Oct. 5. The stores will close by the end of the year.  
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