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Deals

  • Blockbuster cleared for sale process, will avoid liquidation

    New York City -- A Manhattan bankruptcy judge on Thursday has cleared the path for Blockbuster to sell itself to a group of hedge funds, preventing the movie rental chain from having to liquidate its assets.

    Judge Burton R. Lifland has approved procedures for the auction of Blockbuster, with a $290 million initial offer from a group of senior bondholders led by hedge fund Monarch Alternative Capital.
     

  • Recognizing the value of a dollar store

    CITY OF COMMERCE, Calif. — First it was Family Dollar, now 99 Cents Only Stores finds itself in buyout talks, as investors are seeing the value in discount store chains.

    The company has received a proposal to take the company private from the company's founding family and investment firm Leonard Green & Partners LP for $19.09 per share, the Associated Press reported.

  • Wing Park Shopping Center

    Tarrytown, N.Y.-based DLC Management Corp. has launched the redevelopment of Wing Park Shopping Center in Elgin, Ill.

    DLC has pre-leased the redevelopment to a pair of anchor tenants: Walgreens has signed a 75-year lease for a 14,820-sq.-ft. prototypical store with drive-through that will be built to suit, and the existing Family Dollar will be relocating and expanding into an 8,400-sq.-ft. space. The overall redevelopment is 80% pre-leased.

  • 99 Cents Only Stores gets buyout offer from founders, Leonard Green

    City of Commerce, Calif. — Discount store retailer 99 Cents Only Stores has received a proposal to take the company private from the company's founding family and investment firm Leonard Green & Partners LP for $19.09 per share, the Associated Press reported.

    The offer would value the company at about $1.3 billion. According to 99 Cents, the purchasers would include the Schiffer-Gold family, which owns about 33% of its outstanding stock. David Gold is company founder and chairman, and his son-in-law Eric Schiffer is CEO.

  • Readers Speak Out: To what retailers will Borders' prime real estate go?

    In the Feb. 24 edition of SiteTalk, we asked you about Borders'just-announced Chapter 11 bankruptcy and closures, and to what retailers you thought some of that prime real estate would go. Here is what two of our readers had to say:

    "[I think they will go to] regional furniture chains [Value City] and regional electronics such as Hhgregg."
    -- Joe Deckop
    Columbus Consulting
    Columbus, Ohio

  • Caruso Affiliated launches construction of mixed-use project

    Los Angeles -- Caruso Affiliated said it has begun construction on 8500 Burton Way, an upscale residential and ground-floor retail property featuring Trader Joe’s, located in a flourishing region of Los Angeles, adjacent to Beverly Hills.

    The eight-story building combines contemporary architectural elements with rich materials, and is moving forward at a time when most other commercial development has stalled.

  • McAlister’s Deli to open at Cochran Commons

    Charlotte, N.C. -- Jacksonville, Fla.-based Regency Centers said McAlister’s Deli has leased restaurant space at Cochran Commons in Charlotte, N.C.

    McAlister’s Deli has leased 3,600 sq. ft. and is slated to open this summer.

    Cochran Commons is a 66,020-sq.-ft. Harris Teeter-anchored shopping center that also features Great Clips, Caribou Coffee and Walgreens.

  • Belle Chic Salon & Spa to move to Oro Valley

    Oro Valley, Ariz. -- Commercial Retail Advisors said that Belle Chic Salon & Spa has signed a lease for 1,385 sq. ft. in Placita de Oro Shopping Center, located in Oro Valley, Ariz. The new salon is slated to open this March.

    Belle Chic is moving from an existing location, where it had been for three years.

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