Skip to main content

Mergers & Acquisitions

  • Retail real estate poised for strong finish

    The retail real estate market will overcome a slow start to the year and finish 2016 in fine fashion, according to JLL’s U.S. Investment Outlook report.
     

  • DSW profit, sales miss in tough Q1

    Despite improved net sales, DSW Inc. saw net earnings decline substantially during the first quarter of fiscal 2017.
     
    The footwear retailer reported net income of $30.01 million, down 37% from $47.37 million in the prior year quarter. Growing cost of sales and operating expenses, as well as a pretax expense from the February purchase of online footwear retailer Ebuys Inc., cut into profit even as net sales rose 4% to $681.27 million, from $655.47 million. Ebuys contributed $15.1 million in net sales.
     

  • The five fastest growing property managers

    Each year, Chain Store Age compiles a ranking of the fastest growing property managers based on the square footage added. See who topped this year’s list.
     
    The 27th annual survey of Fastest-Growing Managers tallies new domestic and international third-party management and leasing contracts obtained during the 2015 calendar year and ranks the top performers. As always, the measuring stick is square footage. This year’s fastest-growing third-party managers are taking many roads to growth, from acquisition to a multidisciplinary focus.

  • Zimmer wants another shot at Men’s Wearhouse

    Men’s Wearhouse may not have seen the last of original co-founder George Zimmer.

    In an interview with Inc., Zimmer discusses conversations he has had about a possible acquisition attempt with private equity firms.
     
    Click here for more.

  • Real Estate’s 10 Under 40

    Chain Store Age’s annual search for 10 retail real estate stars under the age of 40 years resulted in this: Ten youthful, creative, hard-charging industry executives.

    Some are retailers, others are brokers or from shopping center companies. Three are women. One is under the age of 30. There’s a single Canadian in the bunch. Two work for CBRE. Each has studied the business, sought out mentors, and researched and taken on the issues of the day.

  • Supervalu lays financial groundwork for Save-A-Lot spinoff

    Grocery giant Supervalu Inc. is one step closer to separating its troubled Save-A-Lot banner.
     
    Supevalu, which initially announced it was exploring spinning off Save-A-Lot into a standalone, publicly traded company in July 2015, has completed the amendment of an existing $1.5 billion senior secured term loan agreement. This amendment permits the company and its subsidiaries to undertake certain transactions deemed necessary to enable a spinoff of Save-A-Lot.

  • Wine merchant acquires taste for physical stores

    The formerly online only retailer The Wine Cellar Group isn’t afraid of competition. The company is pursuing its brick and mortar ambitions with a new store in the backyard of Amazon.com and Costco, the nation’s largest seller of wine.
     
    Born online in 1990, The Wine Cellar Group opened its first store in 2012 and has since grown to nine locations. Its newest store will be a Wine Cellar Outlet and is set to open later this year in the Heritage Square shopping center in the Seattle suburb of Issaquah, Costco’s hometown.
     

  • Analysis: Federal Court Blocks Staples’ Acquisition of Office Depot

    Retail mergers have long been subject to scrutiny by the antitrust authorities at the Federal Trade Commission (FTC). But perhaps no two retail chains have found themselves more often in the FTC’s cross-hairs than the two largest office supply providers in the United States, Staples and Office Depot.   
         

X
This ad will auto-close in 10 seconds