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  • U.K. fast-fashion e-tailer interested in acquiring Nasty Gal

    Boohoo, a fast-fashion online retailer based in Manchester, England, is reportedly bidding for bankrupt U.S. retailer Nasty Gal.    Boohoo has filed a petition to incorporate Nasty Gal as part of its business in the United Kingdom, registering the business Nasty Gal Ltd with Companies House, fashionunited.com reported.  
  • Report: Albertsons in talks to buy Price Chopper

    A new billion dollar merger is reported about to rock the supermarket industry.   Albertsons Companies Inc. is in advanced talks to acquire Price Chopper, a privately held, New York-based regional grocery store operator, for around $1 billion, Reuters reported. Price Chopper operates some 130 stores in the Northeast, including New York, Connecticut and Massachusetts.   
  • President-elect impacting Tiffany flagship

    Tiffany & Co.’s sterling jewel — its flagship on Manhattan’s Fifth Avenue — is feeling the impact of beefed up security and protests at Trump Tower, which is located next door to the store.     Since the election, Tiffany said its flagship, the retailer’s largest location and a tourist magnet, has seen an “adverse effect” and sales softness” compared with the year before and relative to the company’s other U.S. stores. And it sees no quick fix of the problem. 
  • Patagonia making good on its Black Friday claim

    Outdoor apparel retailer Patagonia saw record sales on Black Friday that blew past all estimates — and it plans to donate all the revenue.   
  • Cyber Monday brings in record haul

    Cyber Monday has made history — again.   With shoppers spending $3.45 billion online on Cyber Monday, Nov. 28, a 12.1% jump year-over-year, sales not only surpassed predictions, but made this the largest Cyber Monday shopping event to date, according to Adobe Digital Insights, which aggregated data from 23 billion visits to retail websites.  
  • Kohl's breaks digital records

    Not many companies can follow up its own record-breaking Thanksgiving online sales -- but Kohl’s did.   The chain’s president and CEO Kevin Mansell said that the chain hit double-digit, record-breaking online sales and solid brick-and-mortar traffic to stores on Thursday, Nov. 24 and early Friday, Nov. 25, reported Milwaukee Business Journal.  
  • Urban Outfitters comes up short in Q3

    Urban Outfitters posted sales and earnings for its third quarter that failed to meet analysts expectation amid a traffic slowdown and increased promotions at its Anthropologie and Free People stores.   Urban Outfitters earned $47 million, or 40 cents a share, in the third quarter ended Oct. 31, compared with $52 million, or 42 cents a share, in the year-ago period.   Sales rose 5% to $862 million, compared with $825 million a year ago. Same-store sales, which include online, rose 1%.  
  • Slump continues at J. Crew

    J. Crew Group narrowed its loss in the third quarter even as its two-year sales slump continued amid a “difficult traffic environment.”     The retailer posted a net loss of $7.9 million in the quarter ended Oct. 29, compared to a loss of $759.7 million in the year-ago period. (J. Crew booked $845.9 million in impairment losses in the year-earlier period.)   Total revenue decreased 4. 2% to $593.2 million. Same-store sales fell almost 8%.  
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