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FINANCE

  • Lululemon tops estimates in Q3; confident about holiday

    Consumers’ demand for stylish workout wear no shows on slowing down.        Lululemon Athletica Inc.’s sales rose 13% to $544.4 million, surpassing Wall Street estimates.   Total comparable sales, which includes comparable store sales and direct to consumer, increased by 7%. Same-store sales rose 4%.      Profit in the quarter was 47 cents a share, excluding some items. Analysts estimated 43 cents on average.    
  • Things getting worse at Sears as Q3 loss widens on sliding sales

    Sears Holdings Corp.’ woes mounted in the third quarter, as the struggling retailer reported its 20th consecutive quarterly loss and another drop in same-store sales.        Although Sears CEO Eddie Lampert said Sears is “fully committed to restoring profitability,” the retailer’s disastrous quarterly performance caused some industry experts to say Sears’ demise is now a matter of when, not if.  
  • Commentary: Sears like Titanic, ‘looks set to sink’

    (Ed. note: Neil Saunders, CEO of Conlumino, comments on Sears Holdings’ third-quarter results.)   In the movie Titanic there is a line where, realizing chaos is about to en-sue, one character helpfully notes “it’s starting to fall apart; we don’t have much time”. Such a sentiment could well be applied to Sears. The analogy with Titanic is also apt; not least because while Sears was once a titan of US retail, it now looks set to sink.  
  • Costco’s switch to Visa is paying off

    Costco Wholesale Corp. a better-than-expected quarterly profit, helped partially by lower fees to credit card partner Visa.   Costco, which completed its switch to Visa from American Express during the fourth quarter, said net income rose to $545 million, or $1.24 per share, in the first quarter, ended Nov. 20, from $480 million, or $1.09 per share, in the year-ago period. (The retailer’s profit in the latest quarter included a $51 million gain from a legal settlement.)  
  • American Apparel seeks to close nine stores before January auction

    The ongoing saga of American Apparel is slowly making its way to a final conclusion.    The beleaguered retailer is seeking court approval to shutter nine poor-performing stores by the end of  December, prior to the auction of its business on Jan. 9, reported The Wall Street Journal, American Apparel filed Chapter 11 in November, its second filing in 15 months.   
  • Starbucks to nearly double store count by 2021; two new formats in works

    Starbucks Corp. unveiled an ambitious five-year strategy that calls for major expansion, includes two new store formats, including freestanding bakeries.      The coffee giant said it plans to plans to open approximately 12,000 new stores globally by 2021, including 5,000 cafes in China. The new round of expansion would bring Starbucks’s total store portfolio to approximately 37,000 locations.   
  • Staples in deal to sell its European operations

    Staples will sell a controlling stake in its European operations to private equity firm Cerberus Capital Management for an estimated $53.65 million as the retailer continues to focus on North America following its failed take-over of Office Depot.  
  • Newegg reports record-breaking November sales

    Newegg closed the books on its most successful “Black November” to date.   Strong sales from the five-day period of Thanksgiving through Cyber Monday drove a 19.1% year-over-year sales increase. These sales surpassed online shopping as a whole, which increased 15.2% during that same time-rame, according to Adobe Digital Insights, as reported on Nov. 29.   
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