Thursday
December 11, 2008
Office Depot has announced that they are closing 112 under performing stores over the next three months. In addition, they are slowing their expansion plans for 2009. Three stores are closing in my area. Office Depot joins Circuit City, Linens N Things and Boscov’s as retailers who have closed up shop in Monmouth County.
Last year, Office Max closed all but one of their locations in my county. With Office Depot leaving, this leaves Staples as the only national office supply chain with more than one location here.
Kohl’s has announced that they’ve entered into an agreement with Iconix Brands to become the sole distributor of Mudd Apparel. Starting in July of 2009, Kohl’s will oversee the product design and manufacturing of the Mudd line. Kohl’s currently carries the Mudd line in Juniors and Girls apparel, sleepwear, jewelry, accessories, and footwear. While the deal does not include the exclusivity to the footwear line, this deal expands on the success that Kohl’s has seen with the exclusive Candies’ brand license within the same departments.
In other Kohl’s news: Former Kohl’s executive vice president, Thomas Kingsbury, has been named the new president and CEO of Burlington Coat Factory. Kingsbury was previously the CEO and president of the Filene’s/Kaufmann’s division of May Department Stores. Kingsbury joined Kohl’s after Federated Department Stores acquired Department Stores.
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Wednesday
December 3, 2008
Chris Churchill, of the Times Union newspaper in Albany, NY, has a good look into the expansion plans of drug stores like Walgreens, CVS, and Rite-Aid in the New York region: Sick economy, healthy business. Despite the downturn in the economy, drug stores have not completely cut out their expansion plans and are still opening new locations at a solid rate.
And despite the recession, the proliferation continues. Other retailers, shaken by falling sales, are limiting expansions — but nearly every planning board agenda, it seems, contains a drugstore proposal.
The retail economy is ill. But drugstores seem healthy.
“We’re not immune from what’s going on in the economy, but we’re better insulated,” said Michael DeAngelis, spokesman for Rhode Island-based CVS Caremark Corp. “People are still getting their prescriptions filled. They’re still getting sick.”
I think there are a lot of people in the industry, myself included, who spend a lot of time looking at the big picture – national plans and trends of retailers – that we overlook the unique impact that every retailer has on the different locales that they serve. I like articles like this that examine the localized plans of retailers.
Also to note and put out there as a disclaimer, that Chris reached out to me for my thoughts on these retailers expansion plans. I am quoted about midway down the first page of the article. Thanks to him for allowing me to share some of my thoughts with him.
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