Skip to main content

Distribution

  • 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.

  • 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.

  • Sears Holdings closing 78 more stores

    Sears Holdings announced its latest round of store closings as it continues to look for ways to cut expenses and return to profitability after five years of losses.

    The embattled retailer, which has been steadily shrinking its physical portfolio over the last few years, will close 68 Kmart and 10 Sears stores this summer. (See list of locations at end of story.) In February, Sears warned it would speed up the closing of unprofitable stores.

  • Amazon to open new Dallas fulfillment center

    They say everything is bigger in Texas, and that also applies to Amazon.com’s distribution network.

    The digital retailing giant plans to open a sixth Texas fulfillment center in Haslet, making it the fourth Amazon fulfillment center in the Dallas-Fort Worth metroplex. Amazon currently employs more than 8,000 full-time hourly associates at its Texas fulfillment centers and plans to create 1,000 more full-time positions in the new Haslet facility when it opens.

  • Stop & Shop to convert inedible food into energy

    Energy that comes from an unlikely source will help power a distributed center operated by Stop & Shop Supermarket Company.

    The retailer has opened a “Green Energy Facility,” in Freetown, Massachusetts, that will convert inedible food from Stop & Shop’s 212 New England stores into energy that will help power the company's distribution center in Freetown.

  • Supervalu names innovation head as part of executive shuffle

    Supervalu is adding a veteran wholesale executive to a new C-level position and also enacting several other changes to its senior leadership team.

    James Weidenheimer, 57, has been named to the newly-created position of executive VP, corporate development and chief innovation officer, reporting to Supervalu president and CEO Mark Gross. Weidenheimer joins the company after having spent the last 16 years in senior leadership positions with C&S Wholesale Grocers. He is expected to start in his new role by April 25, 2016.

  • Study: Omnichannel, Amazon “effect” impact retail supply chain

    Increased customer expectations for a seamless front-end experience, as well as the “Amazon effect,” are having a significant influence on retailers’ back-end systems and operations.

    According to a new study of 24 senior retail supply chain executives from Auburn University’s Center for Supply Chain Innovation, the Retail Industry Leaders Association (RILA) and Checkpoint Systems, “The State of the Retail Supply Chain,” 81% of respondents are either using, developing or investigating integrated demand planning.

X
This ad will auto-close in 10 seconds