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Mass Merchant

  • Luxury department store retailer shelves sale

    Neiman Marcus Group is going it alone — at least, for now.

  • Best Buy to rent electronics

    An electronics giant might is eyeing a program that could give it a leg up on online rival Amazon.  
  • Canadian REIT buys five grocery-anchored centers

    The Toronto-based Slate Retail REIT announced it has entered into an agreement to acquire five grocery-anchored centers in Florida and Pennsylvania for a total of $105 million.   “This five-asset portfolio meets all of our acquisition criteria -- attractive returns, markets we like that add scale, pricing well below replacement cost, strong anchors, and in-place rents that are below market,” said Slate CEO Greg Stevenson.  
  • Mills Fleet Farm names new CEO

    Mills Fleet Farm has ended its hunt for a CEO.   The Midwest retailer announced the appointment of Derick Prelle as president and CEO succeeding Wayne Sales, who has been serving as interim chief since January 2017. Sales was given the position following the departure of Duncan MacNaugton, who left to become president and COO of Family Dollar.   
  • Kantar Retail: Lidl to generate nearly $700 million in sales by the end of 2018

    Lidl makes its long-awaited U.S. debut on June 15, opening the first three of 20 stores it plans to open this summer across Virginia, North Carolina and South Carolina. Mike Paglia, retail director of Kantan Retail, offers the following insights on the grocer's prospects in the United States:   
  • French retail giant names new CEO

    One of the world's largest retailers has appointed a new chief executive as its looks to catch up with the online revolution and shore up its home performance.   Carrefour has named Alexandre Bompard, 44, as its new chairman and CEO, effective July 18, ending an eight-month search. He succeeds Georges Plassat, who has served in the top position at the hypermarket retailer, which operates more than 11,900 stores in over 30 countries, since 2012.   
  • Apparel giant in store closing move amid sales drop

    Ascena Retail Group, operators of such brands as Ann Taylor, Lane Bryant and Dressbarn, is planning to close hundreds of stores. The news came on the heels of a brutal third quarter.   The company reported a net loss of $1.031 billion, or $5.29 per diluted share in the third quarter ended April 29, compared to net income of $15 million last year, or $0.08 per diluted share, in the year-ago quarter.   
  • Target and Cartwheel apps to merge

    Target upping its mobile game.    In a move that will eliminate customer confusion over the retailer's two separate apps, the discounter will move its Cartwheel savings app into the main Target app. The integration will happen this summer.  
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