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  • ARCA reinstates founder as CEO

    Minneapolis - Edward "Jack" Cameron, who served as CEO of Appliance Recycling Centers of America Inc. (ARCA) from 1976 to 2014, has been reinstated as CEO. Private investment firm Isaac Capital Group LLC (ICG), the largest single shareholder of ARCA with a 12% stake, backed Cameron’s return.

    Cameron replaces Mark Eisenschenk, who had served as ARCA president since July 2013 and CEO since August 2014. ICG has also nominated new members to the company's board of directors, replacing the majority of the old board.

  • Home Depot hosts hurricane workshops May 30

    Atlanta - The Home Depot Inc. will host its third annual Hurricane Preparedness Workshops on May 30. The one-day event, held in nearly 700 stores from the Gulf Coast to New England, will help prepare residents in storm-prone regions ahead of hurricane season, which begins June 1.

    The free workshops will be held 10-11:30 a.m. local time and cover storm readiness topics including understanding hurricane alerts and categories, creating a storm survival kit, choosing a generator, weathering a hurricane safely and repairing a home after a storm has passed.

  • Alibaba overtakes Amazon as ‘most valuable’ global retail brand

    London -- The most valuable retail brand in the world lacks physical stores. At least that’s according to the tenth annual BrandZTM Top 100 Most Valuable Global Brands ranking, released by WPP and Millward Brown. Chinese online giant Alibaba took the top spot of the retail, with a brand value of $66.4 billion, overtaking Amazon, at $62.3 billion.

  • Lumber Liquidators CEO quits unexpectedly

    New York – Robert Lynch, CEO of embattled Lumber Liquidators Holdings, has unexpectedly resigned as the Justice Department seeks to file criminal charges for the company’s allegedly selling Chinese hardwood laminate products that had illegal levels of formaldehyde. In a brief statement, Lumber Liquidators gave no reason for Lynch’s departure.

  • Lowe’s Q1 profit, sales up but miss Street

    Mooresville, N.C. -- Lowe's Companies reported an increase in profit and sales in the first quarter but its performance in both metrics fell short of Wall Street estimates. The home furnishings retailer reported its results a day after rival Home Depot reported earnings and revenue that topped estimates.

    Lowe’s net income increased 7.8% to $673 million in the quarter ended May 1, from $624 million a year earlier.

    Net sales rose 5.4% to $14.13 billion. Total same-store sales were up 5.2%.

  • Nebraska Furniture Mart opens nation’s largest home furnishings store

    New York -- While most retailers are shrinking their footprints, Nebraska Furniture Mart (NFM) is doing just the opposite, opening the nation’s largest home furnishings store. Located in the new 433-acre Grandscape mixed-use development in The Colony, Texas, the two-level store has a whopping 560,000 sq, ft. of selling space (equivalent to about nine football fields). Including its on-site warehouse, the space totals more than 1.8 million sq. ft.

  • Retail Rap: Sears Goes on a Selling Spree

    About a year and a half ago, I wrote the following about Sears in an article that appeared in this space: “the company has been run less like a retail operation and more like a REIT for many years now.”

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