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Budgets/Spending/Market Size

  • Tiffany shines as Q1 profit surges 25%

    New York — Tiffany & Co. said Thursday its first-quarter profit rose 25% on higher revenue across all regions worldwide. The results beat expectations and the company raised its forecast for the year above current Wall Street estimates.

    Tiffany net income rose to $81.1 million for the three months ended April 30, up from $64.4 million a year earlier.

    Revenue jumped 20% to $761 million from $633.6 million last year, sharply higher than analyst predictions of $702.6 million.

  • Nordstrom to close downtown Indianapolis store

    Seattle — Nordstrom announced plans to close its Circle Centre store in downtown Indianapolis, Ind.   Opened September 8, 1995, the 216,000-sq.-ft.  location will close to the public at the end of business on July 31, 2011. 

    The retailer will continue to operate a nearby location at The Fashion Mall at Keystone, Ind..  It will open  a Nordstrom Rack store at the Shops at Rivers Edge in September.

  • Whose ad budget is it, anyway?

    By Scott Setrakian, [email protected]

    Who should manage your company's digital ad budget dollars? In an advertising world where digital advertising dollars have now been proven to impact in-store sales, who should own the digital ad budget — the dot.com division, or the stores team?

  • Eight mistakes retailers make in LED retrofits

    By Ron Harwood, [email protected]

    We have all seen the sales people come through the office claiming to have the answer to our lighting energy and efficacy concerns. Virtually every “pitch” will deal with LEDs, and only a rare few will be touting the older fluorescent and the new, almost miniature metal halide lamps.

  • American Express CFO Survey: Economic outlook high, M&A activity to ramp up

    Optimism about economic expansion is on the rise among senior finance executives in the United States and around the rest of the globe, according to the annual American Express/CFO Research Global Business & Spending Monitor.  In fact, the level of optimism was the highest in the four years that the survey has been conducted, with three in four (75%) executives expecting modest to strong economic expansion over the next twelve months -- up from 71% in 2010. The U.S. figure was even higher at 79%, although most predict modest growth.

  • Gas prices put pressure on consumers

    WASHINGTON — An Associated Press/GfK poll released Friday determined that rising gas prices will cause “serious” hardship for as much as 41% of Americans.

    Almost 3-in-4 adults acknowledged that $4 per gallon or more at the pump will at least cause some hardship.

  • Target remains confident in the face of sales and expense pressures

    Target CFO Doug Scovanner moderated analysts’ second-quarter and full-year earnings expectations slightly, although it can at times be difficult to tell given the language used to communicate in the Wall Street guidance game.

  • Foot Locker Q1 profit soars 76%

    New York City -- Foot Locker said on Thursday that its first-quarter profit jumped 76% as sales rose sharply. The retailer, which has benefited from efforts to cut costs and close dozens of poorly performing locations, said it earned $94 million for the quarter that ended April 30.

    Sales increased 13% to $1.45 billion, from $1.28 billion a year earlier. Same-store sales rose 12.8%. The results easily beat the average estimates of analysts.

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