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Financial/Banking

  • Aldi to open first New Hampshire location

    Boston -- WS Development announced that Aldi will open a new store at Stateline Shopping Center, located in Salem, N.H.

    The new store, the grocer’s first in the state, will join a newly opened Lowe’s anchor, as well as Sovereign Bank and NAMCO at the recently redeveloped 232,000-sq.-ft. shopping center.

  • A rebuttal to a rating downgrade

    Last week Janney Montgomery Scott analyst David Strasser downgraded shares of Target to neutral from buy. He offered a litany of things that could go wrong with the Target story, which were subsequently refuted by someone named Will Ashworth on the website “Investopedia.”

  • Borders to sell itself to private investment firm for $215 million

    Ann Arbor, Mich. -- Borders Group announced Thursday that it has agreed to sell itself to Najafi Cos. for $215 million. The deal is subject to court approval.

    Najafi Cos. is a Phoenix-based private investment company which owns the Book-of-the-Month Club.

    The "stalking horse" bid will open an auction for the company and its assets, so a higher bid is possible, according to reports.

  • NRF: ‘Extremely disappointed’ in swipe-fee regulations set

    Washington, D.C. -- The National Retail Federation said Thursday that it is disappointed in the final debit card swipe-fee regulations set by the Federal Reserve.

    Under the new rule, the current debit card swipe-fee rate of 1%-2% of each transaction will be replaced with a flat fee of not more than 21 cents per transaction for the nation’s largest banks -- substantially higher than the flat fee of up to 12 cents the Fed originally proposed in December 2010.

  • U.S. Consumer confidence reaches 10-week high

    Washington, D.C. -- A report released Thursday by Bloomberg said that consumer confidence reached its highest level in 10 weeks, thanks to falling gas prices and despite a 9.1% unemployment rate.

    The Bloomberg Consumer Comfort Index increased to minus 43.9 for the period ended June 26, after dropping to minus 44.9 the prior week. According to the report, falling fuel costs are reducing consumer stress.

  • Christopher & Banks profit, sales drop in Q1

    Minneapolis -- Christopher & Banks Corp. reported Thursday that net income for the quarter ended May 28 was $1.9 million, compared with $6.3 million in the year-ago period.

    Sales dropped to $123.8 million, from $126.2 million a year earlier. Same-store sales dipped 2%.

    The retailer said it plans to open 31 new stores and close 35 existing stores in fiscal 2012.
     

  • Family Dollar Q3 profit up, misses Street

    Matthews, N.C. -- Family Dollar Stores' third-quarter net income increased 6.5% as broader markdowns drew more store traffic. Its results, however, fell short of analysts' expectations.

    For the quarter ended May 28, Family Dollar had net income of $111.1 million, compared with $104.4 million a year earlier.

    Revenue was up 8% to $2.15 billion. Same-store sales rose 4.7%.

    Family Dollar said sales were strongest in consumables and home products.

  • Leonard Green buying BJ’s Wholesale for $2.8 billion

    New York City -- BJ's Wholesale Club announced on Wednesday that it has agreed to be acquired by the private equity firms of Leonard Green & Partners and CVC Capital Partners (“CVC”) in an all-cash transaction valued at approximately $2.8 billion.

    BJ's, based in Westborough, Mass., has 190 stores in 15 states. The company said its board unanimously approved the buyout.

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