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Financial/Banking

  • Ollie’s eyes IPO and 950 stores

    Off-price retailer Ollie’s quietly doubled in size the past few years and now the company plans to go public, accelerating growth of no-frills stores it affectionately refers to as “semi-lovely” warehouses.

    Ollie’s operates 181 stores in the Eastern U.S. that last year generated annual sales $638 million and net income of $26.9 million.

  • Neiman Marcus swings to Q3 profit, but same-store sales slow

    Dallas — Neiman Marcus Group posted a profit of $19.8 million for the third quarter, compared with a year-earlier loss of $8 million. (The quarter included a $16 million charge for amortization of intangible assets, compared with a $36 million charge a year earlier.)

    Revenue for the period ended May 2 grew to $1.22 billion from $1.16 billion in the year-ago period, boosted by Neiman’s acqusition of luxury online retailer MyTheresa in fall 2014.

  • Apple opens 6th Manhattan store; turns old bank into retail space

    New York — Apple has opened its sixth store in Manhattan, on the Upper East Side in a Beaux Arts building that was originally the home of the U.S. Mortgage & Trust bank in the 1920s. The site, on Madison Avenue, most recently housed a luxury retailer.

  • Same store sales grow 2.2% at Neiman Marcus

    <The Neiman Marcus Group says currency exchange rates put pressure on traffic in the first quarter as the company reported a smaller than expected boost in same store sales. 

    The retailer said same store sales increased 2.2% for the third quarter ended May 2 as the strong dollar had some impact on the retailer’s business.

  • 3 things retailers should know to ensure a smooth EMV migration

    During the next several months, many U.S. retailers will begin transitioning their point-of-sale systems to accept EMV (Europay, MasterCard and Visa) technology. EMV-ready cards are most frequently recognized by the presence of a small security chip embedded in the card itself. This technology is not new – it has been in use in Europe, Canada and much of the world for years.

  • 99 Cents Only profits plummet in Q1

    City of Commerce, Calif. — A sharp increase in selling, general and administrative (SG&A) expenses drove an 88% drop in net income at 99 Cents Only Stores Inc. to $1.17 billion in the first quarter of fiscal 2016 from $9.57 billion the same quarter the prior fiscal year.

    The profit plummet came as total sales rose 6% to $506.17 million from $477.9 million. Same-store sales declined 1.7%, primarily due to lower customer traffic.

  • China approves Staples-Office Depot merger

    Framingham, Mass. — Staples Inc. has received clearance from the Ministry of Commerce of the People’s Republic of China for its proposed $6.3 billion acquisition of Office Depot. Staples continues to seek clearance from regulatory agencies in the U.S., the European Union, Canada, and Australia.

    The Commerce Commission of New Zealand gave its clearance for the transaction last week.

  • Pundits pontificate on Walmart’s wage actions

    Liberal economist and New York Times columnist Paul Krugman and Bloomberg financial columnist Barry Ritholz weighed in this week with points of view on Walmart’s recent investment in wages and other changes to improve worker satisfaction.

    Both took shots at the company by revisiting some of the negative characterizations of how Walmart treats workers that have been repeated so often they have taken on a life of their own.

    Krugman offer a more technical view on the company’s actions while Ritholz took more of a snarky approach.

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