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Labor & Employment

  • Groupon exec named CFO at Digital River

    E-commerce solutions provider Digital River Inc. has named a Groupon executive as its next CFO.

    Digital River has announced that Hoke Horne has joined the company as chief financial officer. In this role, Horne, who has more than 20 years of financial experience, will be responsible for the company’s accounting, finance, tax, corporate development and enterprise operations activities.

  • Retailers urge Congress to make changes to heathcare act

    Arlington, Va. -- The Retail Industry Leaders Association (RILA) is calling on Congress to make “much-needed” changes to the Affordable Care Act (ACA).

    The move comes in response to the Supreme Court of the United States' ruling Thursday upholding subsidies provided through ACA.

  • Dollar General has a new finance chief

    Dollar General Corp. has promoted one of its finance executives to serve as interim chief financial officer.

    The company says John W. Garratt will serve as interim chief financial officer effective July 1. He follows David Tehle, who had previously announced his retirement in March.

  • More exec changes at 99 Cents Only

    New York -- Discounter 99 Cents Only has appointed a former Walmart executive as interim CFO — for the second time.

    Less than a month after former Kmart executive Andy Giancamilli was named interim president and CEO, 99 Cents named Michael Fung to the role of CFO.

  • Report: A major retailer boosting minimum wage — again

    Conshohocken, Pa. – Home furnishings giant Ikea is increasing the minimum wage it pays to U.S. employees in stores and some distribution centers for the second straight year.

    According to the Associated Press, Ikea’s average U.S. minimum hourly wage will rise about 10% to $11.87 from $10.76 as of Jan. 1, 2016.

  • Rite Aid completes purchase of pharmacy benefit manager

    CAMP HILL, Pa. — Rite Aid announced on Wednesday that it has completed its previously announced acquisition of Envision Pharmaceutical Services from global private investment firm TPG and other shareholders. The transaction is valued at approximately $2 billion, including approximately $1.8 billion in cash and approximately 27.9 million Rite Aid shares.

  • The Ugly Truth: Retailers losing millions betting on merchants’ intuition

    The recent admission by Mickey Drexler to making “mistakes” while explaining the results of two J.Crew sweaters – one successful, one not – shined a bright light on the importance of each new product decision and the consequences of getting it wrong. In the grand scheme of things, one or two bad decisions do not always make or break a company. But when you string multiple bad decisions together, the stakes are much higher.

  • NRF survey details retailers’ $44 billion problem

    Washington, D.C. - Retailers lose billions of dollars to shoplifting, employee and vendor theft and administrative error, collectively known as inventory shrink.

    According to the National Retail Federation (NRF)/University of Florida National Retail Security Survey, inventory shrink averaged 1.38% of retail sales, or $44 billion, in 2014. (The methodology for the survey changed in 2015 and as such, NRF does not have comparable data from prior years for this year’s report.) The report was sponsored by The Retail Equation.  

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