Skip to main content

Trading Partners

  • CVS Caremark names interim retail leaders

    Woonsocket, R.I. -- CVS Caremark said Tuesday that it has appointed its two highest ranking retail executives to jointly lead the company’s CVS/pharmacy business, effectively immediately.

    Mike Bloom, executive VP merchandising and supply chain, and Scott Baker, executive VP internal operations and real estate, will jointly manage the chain’s retail business until CVS completes its search for a new president.

  • J. Crew potential settlement could extend bidding period

    New York City -- A Tuesday report by Bloomberg said that J. Crew Group is close to settling a shareholder lawsuit over its proposed $3 billion takeover by private-equity firms TPG Capital and Leonard Green & Partners LP.

    Citing two unnamed sources, the report said that as part of the settlement, J. Crew would extend the period to solicit competing offers until Feb. 15 and add provisions that make it easier to accept a rival bid.

  • Walmart chief named to RILA board

    Sarasota, Fla. -- The Retail Industry Leaders Association said Tuesday that Bill Simon, president and CEO of Walmart Stores, along with Steven Preston, president and CEO of OakLeaf Waste management, have joined the RILA board of directors.

    Simon replaces Walmart vice chairman and president and CEO of global e-commerce and global sourcing Eduardo Castro-Wright on the board.

    The RILA board meets twice a year to discuss the issues facing retailers and to offer insight into the opportunities and challenges confronting the industry.

  • South Africa’s Massmart approves Wal-Mart bid

    New York City -- The shareholders of South African Massmart chain have overwhelmingly accepted Wal-Mart's offer to buy 51% of their company, the chief executive said Monday, paving the way for Wal-Mart to enter Africa.

    Massmart said the proposal was approved by 97% of shareholders who voted Monday -- 75% approval had been needed. Wal-Mart offered 148 rand (about $20) per share in a 17 billion rand (about $2 billion) deal.

    The deal will have to be approved by South Africa's anti-monopoly regulators.

  • Starbucks eyes India

    New York City -- Starbucks Coffee Co. said Thursday that it signed a memorandum of understanding with Tata Coffee Ltd., an Indian coffee bean provider, which will allow Starbucks to source and roast coffee beans at Tata's Coorg, India facility.

    In addition, the deal will allow the companies to "explore the development of Starbucks retail stores in associated retail outlets and hotels," Starbucks said in a statement.

  • BH Properties names COO

    Los Angeles -- BH Properties announced that Ronald J. Platisha has been promoted to the newly created position of COO.

    Platisha will lead the organizational operations while building and maintaining relationships with financial institutions.

    Platisha, a 30-year veteran in the commercial real estate industry, has served as CFO at BH Properties for the past four years.

  • Union rabble rousing precedes Massmart vote

    Dow Jones this morning reported that South African retailer and Walmart takeover target Massmart Holdings has given assurances it will continue to honor all agreements with labor unions and local labor laws if the buyout goes through. That’s what Walmart and Massmart have been saying since the deal was announced last year but they have to keep saying it because union activists are everywhere in the world.

  • In other NRF news . . .

    Retailers at NRF’s convention this week got a citing of Bill Fields, a former Walmart executive who spent 25 years with the company serving in various roles from 1971 to 1996. Today Fields is chairman of a group called China Horizon, a joint venture with the Chinese postal service charged with helping to develop retail and consumption in rural China, and it was the topic of China that Fields addressed during the super session: “Making the retail business dynamic,” sponsored by Microsoft.

X
This ad will auto-close in 10 seconds