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Supply Chain & Merchandising

  • Walmart cutting 7,000 jobs

    Walmart is eliminating about 7,000 back-office positions at its U.S. stores, with the majority of the cuts in the accounting and invoicing areas.     The move, which was first reported by The Wall Street Journal, follows a test earlier this summer at 500 stores in the West to cut three administrative accounting and invoicing jobs at each store.    
  • Genesco cuts outlook

    Changing footwear trends took a bite out of Genesco Inc.’s sales in the second quarter.   The company reported net income of $14.6 million, up from a year-earlier profit of $7.5 million.   Genesco’s revenue for the second quarter, ended on July 30, fell 4.6% to a less-than-expected $625.6 million.   Total same-store sales fell 1%, with a 4% decline at the Journeys Group.   
  • PREIT installs Amazon lockers at 15 malls

    PREIT unveiled Amazon lockers at 15 of its mall locations on the East coast, making it one of the first mall owners to engage in this most physical of online-offline integrations.   Amazon shoppers who choose the locker option when checking out are notified when their packages have been delivered and can go to the locker location to pick them up. Consumers gain an added convenience and mall tenants get Web shoppers in their stores.  
  • September 15 deadline set for bids on Hastings leases

    Bids to assume the leases of 120-plus Hastings Entertainment stores will not be accepted after Sept. 15, announced RCS Real Estate Advisors.   The chain’s inventory was earlier purchased by Hilco Merchant Resources and Gordon Bros. Retail Partners after the music, movie, and video game chain was unable to emerge from Chapter 11. Hastings Entertainment was founded in 1972 by Sam Marmaduke, who as head of Western Merchandisers first convinced Walmart to carry music and continued to supply the chain until 1994.  
  • Meijer launching home delivery service

    Meijer is jumping into the increasingly crowded food delivery arena.    In a move to deliver even more convenience to its time-starved shoppers, the Michigan-based retailer launching an app-based grocery delivery service in Detroit and southeastern Michigan.  
  • Amazon now serving up Houston meal deliveries

    Amazon continues its expansion into the restaurant delivery arena.   Further expanding benefits to its Prime Now members, Amazon launched free one-hour deliveries from popular chain restaurants in the Houston region.   Houston-based members using the Prime Now mobile app, or those visiting the Prime Now website, can view participating restaurants, browse menus, place orders, and track the status of their delivery in real-time.  
  • Report: Retail rents rising and vacancy rates falling in 2016

    Though it forecasts a stronger-than-anticipated closure season, Cushman & Wakefield sees average retail rents ending the year 4.6% higher than they were in 2016.   The company’s U.S. Macro Forecast released this week said that consistent demand for space in Class A retail centers is the biggest factor in rental-rate growth. Cushman analysts also predict that 2016 will see a drop in the retail vacancy rate to 5.8% from 6.6% last year — though they see it moving back up to 6% in 2017.  
  • Chico’s Q2 tops Street; cuts 200 jobs in corporate streamlining

    Chico’s FAS reported better-than-expected second quarter earnings and announced new cost-saving measures. It also said the president of its namesake brand is stepping down.  
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