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Supply Chain & Merchandising

  • Macy’s rolling out off-price pop-ups for holidays

    Macy’s is expanding its off-price concept, Macy’s Backstage, in a pop-up format.   In a test, the department store retailer is placing Backstage pop-ups in 45 existing Macy's stores in time for the holiday shopping season, the Cincinnati Business Journal reported.  
  • Regency Centers, Equity One merge in $15 billion deal

    Regency Centers, a major player in grocery-anchored centers with 307 properties, and Equity One, owner of 98 retail properties, have signed an agreement to merge. Regency will continue as the surviving public company and, it claims, assume the position as the largest shopping center real estate investment trust.   The combined company is expected to have a total market capitalization of approximately $15.6 billion.   
  • Neiman Marcus loses key executive

    The CFO of Neiman Marcus has resigned after 15 months on the job.   Donald Grimes has resigned as COO and CFO of the luxury retailer, effective immediately. No reason was given for his departure. But in an SEC filing, the company said Grimes's resignation "was not the result of any disagreement regarding any matter" related to its "operations, policies or practices."   Grimes joined Neiman Marcus in June 2015, after a seven-year stint at Wolverine World Wide where he was CFO. 
  • Amazon expands home services

    Consumers in more cities will soon be able to turn to the nation’s largest e-commerce retailer to find help for home chores and services.   Amazon said it is expanding Amazon Home Services into 20 new metropolitan areas across the country, including Indianapolis; Las Vegas; San Antonio, Texas; Ann Arbor, Mich.; Cleveland, Ohio; Trenton, N.J., and more. Launched in 2015, the service now includes providers from almost 60 professions offering more than 1,200 unique services.  
  • American Apparel files Chapter 11 amid ‘failed’ turnaround strategy; future uncertain

    Beleaguered American Apparel has filed its second Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection in just a little over a year. But this time around its future as a retailer looks even more uncertain.  
  • Department store retailer strong in Q3, raises outlook

    Nordstrom delivered a strong performance in its fiscal third quarter even as a hefty charge related to its Trunk Club business ate into its profit.   Total net sales rose 7.2% to a better-than-expected $3.5 billion from $3.2 billion a year ago, fueled by the shift of the company’s popular anniversary sale to the quarter. Same-store sales increased 2.4%, also more than expected. As it has done in recent past quarters, Nordstrom Rack outpaced the full-priced division, Net sales were up more than 10%, and same-store sales rose nearly 4%.
  • The Rise of Robots in Retail

    The retail industry is on the precipice of a robotics revolution. While leading-edge retailers like Amazon have been using robots, their role has largely remained experimental or behind the scenes, primarily used in warehouses and fulfillment centers to perform pick, pack and ship duties. That is about to change.   
  • Singles Day: Alibaba reports record sales, but growth slows

    The 24-hour Chinese shopping mega-event known as Singles Day brought in record numbers for the country’s e-commerce giant, Alibaba. But it appears that the growth rate is decelerating.    Alibaba Group Holding Limited reported that the total amount of goods and services sold by vendors (known as gross merchandise volume) over its e-commerce sites rose 24% to a record $17.8 billion this year. Last year, by contrast, sales on Alibaba platforms increased 60%.  
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