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Supply Chain & Merchandising

  • Retail legend to step down

    The man who turned a single struggling bookstore he bought in 1965 into a retail empire is retiring from active duty.

    Leonard Riggio, founder and executive chairman of Barnes & Noble Inc., announced that he will retire as chairman in September, following the chain’s annual shareholder meeting.

    “I’ve done everything I have wanted to do in business and now it is time for me to pursue the many other endeavors related to my philanthropic and social interests,” said Riggio.

  • Coach Q3 profit tops estimates; COO out in job reduction

    Coach on Tuesday reported its first growth in quarterly profit in three years. The retailer also announced a series of management changes and corporate job reductions resulting in a pre-tax charge of about $65 million to $80 million in the fourth quarter.

    Coach said it would cut an unspecified number of corporate jobs, and announced that president and COO Gebhard Rainer and global marketing president David Duplantis would leave the company.

  • Sears announces another closing — but this one doesn’t involve stores

    Sears Holdings will shutter its apparel design office in New York City.

    The struggling retailer will shutter the 154-employee office in July, reported the New York Post, which cited a Department of Labor filing.

    Sears will move approximately 40 positions to an existing site in San Francisco, with the remainder positions to be cut, according to the report.

  • Analysis: Should retailers rent or bye?

    While generally steady post-recessionary economic performance has led to an extended period of retail growth, retailers and retail real estate professionals around the country have begun openly wondering about just how high rental rates can continue to climb. In the last few years, occupancy costs are up significantly virtually across the board; most dramatically in dense urban locations in larger markets.

  • Former Family Dollar CFO joins Supervalu board

    Supervalu on Monday announced that experienced financial executive and corporate board member Mary Winston has been appointed to Supervalu's board of directors effective April 27, 2016.

  • Amazon expands restaurant delivery service, adds price match

    More consumers can now order takeout food from Amazon.com, and rest assured they are paying a competitive price.

    Amazon is making one-hour delivery from 117 different local restaurants available to Prime Now customers in 33 ZIP codes across the San Francisco market. Using the Prime Now mobile app, San Francisco customers can view participating restaurants, browse menus, place orders, track the status of their delivery, and watch as their driver travels from the restaurant to the delivery address in real time.

  • Office Depot earnings, sales derailed by stalled Staples merger

    Office Depot put the blame for disappointing first-quarter financial results on its delayed buyout by Staples.

    "The protracted regulatory review of the pending Staples acquisition continues to have a substantial disruptive impact on our business," stated Roland Smith, chairman and CEO, Office Depot. “Our North American Business Solutions Division and International Division are more impacted by this disruption and accordingly, both failed to meet our sales and profit expectations this quarter.”

  • SuperValu beats Q4 profit; sales fall at Save-A-Lot

    SuperValu Inc. on Tuesday reported fiscal fourth-quarter profit that beat expectations. But in a setback to plans to spin-off its deep-discount banner, same-store sales fell 2.2% at Save-A-Lot.

    SuperValu earnings in the quarter increased to $52 million, or 20 cents a share, up from $39 million, or 14 cents a share, a year earlier. Excluding debt refinancing, store closures and expenses related to the potential Save-A-Lot spinoff, adjusted per-share earnings rose to 23 cents.

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