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  • Retailers give thanks for Cyber Week

    Despite a few hiccups with site availability, Cyber Week 2015 on the whole was a huge success for the retail industry and bodes well for the remainder of the holiday season.

    According to data from Adobe, from Thanksgiving Day through Cyber Monday, consumers spent $11 billion online. This marked a 15% increase from Cyber Week in 2014 and represented 30% of a total $39.5 billion in November online sales. Adobe predicts consumers will spend $1 billion a day online every day from Dec. 1- Dec. 18.

  • Report: Kroger on acquisition spree

    The nation’s largest supermarket operator has been on a tear since 2014, increasing its portfolio through acquisitions, reports The Cincinnati Enquirer. “We could get more deals by Kroger – and we should get more deals, more stores and more growth,” Scott Mushkin, an analyst with Wolfe Research in New York, said in the report. [The Cincinnati Enquirer]

  • Target to pay nearly $40M to banks over data breach

    Target Corp. has tentatively reached another milestone in its continuing efforts to remediate financial losses caused by its massive 2013 data breach.

    According to multiple media reports, Target has reached a settlement with MasterCard Inc. and a number of issuing banks. In papers filed in federal court in Minneapolis, Target said it would reimburse a total of $39 million in the settlement. That figure would include about $20 million for issuing banks not covered in other class action suits against Target and about $19 million to the MasterCard Account Data Compromise program.

  • Save-A-Lot names CEO in preparation for possible spinoff

    Supervalu on Wednesday announced Eric Claus has been named the CEO of Save-A-Lot, the company’s hard-discount grocery segment. Claus, 59, joins the company after spending the past two-plus years as the chairman, president and CEO of Red Apple Stores, a chain of value retail stores in Canada. 
  • Safety is automatic for Midwest grocer

    Wisconsin-based, 21-store grocery retailer Festival Foods takes food safety so seriously that it no longer thinks about it.

    That’s because Festival Foods has chosen the food safety platform from ReposiTrak to automatically manage regulatory and business documentation compliance within its supply chain.

  • Home Depot breach settlement reportedly in the works

    The Home Depot Inc. has reached a contingent settlement with MasterCard International Inc. over the home improvement giant's massive 2014 data breach, according to a new report. The Atlanta Business Journal says that while a contingent deal with MasterCard International appears to have been reached, other financial institutions suing the retailer say they want more information. [Atlanta Business Journal]

  • Forever 21 connects consumers with new app

    Forever 21 is heeding the popular wisdom that mobile devices serve as omnichannel remote controls with its new app.

    The fast-fashion chain is unveiling a new Android app and updating its existing iPhone app. Designed to enhance the shopping experience in-store and online, the app features five key touch points, including:

    • F21 Inspiration – displays shoppable editorial stories, shop by outfits, lookbooks and exclusive videos.

  • A surging American Eagle Outfitters names CEO — finally

    Everything old is new again at American Eagle Outfitters, apparently with good reason.

    The teen apparel retailer on Wednesday named Jay L. Schottenstein as CEO, effective immediately. Schottenstein, who has served as interim chief since January 2014, will also continue in his role as executive chairman of the board. The news of his appointment came as the retailer reported a strong increase in its third quarter earnings. It was the chain’s third consecutive quarter of increased sales and profits.

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