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Transform SR Brands LLC

  • Home improvement giant adding iconic brand

    Lowe's Cos. is adding a new brand to its tool box.
  • Sears ends relationship with century-old partner

    Sears Holdings has broken up with one of its oldest suppliers.
  • Sears borrows even more money from CEO

    Beleaguered Sears Holdings got another lifeline from its owner.
  • The brands with the best online performance and shopability are…

    When it comes to the top 10 brands that offer the best online experiences, only three traditional retailers make the grade.
  • Embattled department store retailer gets fresh cash infusion from owner

    As it heads into its most important selling season, Sears Holding Corp. is receiving another cash infusion from its CEO and largest shareholder.   Sears is borrowing $100 million from units of CEO Eddie Lampert's hedge fund ESL Investments for "general corporate purposes," according to a regulatory filing. The new infusion brings the total of Lampert's outstanding loans to Sears to $499.4 million.   
  • Burlington to open in Sears hole at Magnolia Mall

    PREIT announced that it has fully leased the space vacated by Sears at Magnolia Mall, nine months after the store closed shop at the Florence, South Carolina, property.   Burlington opens in a 46,000-sq.-ft. space there this week. It will be joined by HomeGoods (20,000 sq. ft.) and Five Below (8,500 sq. ft.) in the spring. Also slated to open at that time is a 20,000-sq.-ft. H&M store.  
  • A Kmart closure has Illinois town mulling new opportunity

    Many American communities see the closing of a long-successful department store as a tragedy. Town officials of Oak Lawn, Illinois, see it as an opportunity.   “It is a great location and I think its future…can be very, very bright and strong, and so does the owner of the property,” village manager Larry Deetjen said of the shopping center at 95th Street and Pulaski Road in an interview with the Chicago Tribune.  
  • PREIT sells Altoona mall for $33 million

    PREIT, which has long been pursuing a strategy of unloading underperforming malls from its portfolio, announced it has sold the Logan Valley Mall for $33.2 million net of credits issued to the buyer. The new owner’s identity was not released.   The Altoona, Pennsylvania, mall -- anchored by Macy's, J.C. Penney and Sears -- had been turning in sales-per-square-foot of $324 versus an average of $475 for the rest of the PREIT portfolio.  
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