Posted on 01/08/2009 6:20:10 AM PST by Ebenezer
CINCINNATI - (Business Wire) Macys, Inc. (NYSE:M) today announced the closing of 11 underperforming Macys stores.
These closings are part of our normal-course process to prune underperforming locations each year in order to maintain a healthy portfolio of stores, said Terry J. Lundgren, chairman, president and chief executive officer of Macys, Inc. While new store growth has slowed in the current economy, our long-term strategy is to continue to selectively add new stores while closing those that are underperforming.
(Editors Note: Macys, Inc. this morning also issued a separate news release reporting December 2008 sales.)
Stores to be closed are located in:
- Ernst & Young Plaza (Citicorp Plaza), Los Angeles, CA (135,000 square feet; 136 employees; opened in 1986)
- The Citadel, Colorado Springs, CO (195,000 square feet; 105 employees; opened in 1984)
- Westminster Mall, Westminster, CO (156,000 square feet; 110 employees; opened in 1986)
- Palm Beach Mall, West Palm Beach, FL (190,000 square feet; 71 employees; opened in 1979)
- Mauna Lani Bay Hotel, Island of Hawaii, HI (3,000 square feet; 3 employees; opened in 1983)
- Lafayette Square, Indianapolis, IN (160,000 square feet; 84 employees; opened in 1974)
- Brookdale Center, Brooklyn Center, MN (195,000 square feet; 72 employees; opened in 1966)
- Crestwood Mall, St. Louis, MO (166,000 square feet; 176 employees; opened in 1969)
- Natrona Heights Plaza, Natrona Heights, PA (73,000 square feet; 124 employees; opened in 1956)
- Century III Furniture and Clearance, West Mifflin, PA (83,000 square feet; 3 employees; opened in 2000)
- Bellevue Center, Nashville, TN (211,000 square feet; 76 employees; opened in 1990).
Final clearance sales at these stores will begin within the next week (with the exception of the Hawaii location, which will not hold a final clearance sale).
The decision to close stores is difficult, and often occurs when the market changes, new competing shopping centers are opened nearby to existing older ones, or when customers change shopping habits. In the store closing process, we are committed to treating affected associates with respect and openness, Lundgren said.
Affected associates in good standing may be considered for open positions at other Macys locations. Regular full-time and part-time associates who are laid off due to a store closing will be provided severance benefits and outplacement assistance.
Costs associated with these 11 store closings will be approximately $65 million (of which approximately $12 million will be cash), most of which will be booked in the fourth quarter of 2008.
The company opened four new Macys stores and one furniture gallery in 2008, as well as reopened a New Orleans store damaged by Hurricane Katrina. In 2009, Macys, Inc. expects to open three new Macys stores and one replacement store. Following the store closings announced today, Macys, Inc. will operate 848 stores 808 Macys and 40 Bloomingdales.
Macy's, Inc., with corporate offices in Cincinnati and New York, is one of the nation's premier retailers, with fiscal 2007 sales of $26.3 billion. The company operates more than 840 department stores in 45 states, the District of Columbia, Guam and Puerto Rico under the names of Macy's and Bloomingdale's. The company also operates macys.com and, bloomingdales.com. Prior to June 1, 2007, Macy's, Inc. was known as Federated Department Stores, Inc.
All statements in this press release that are not statements of historical fact are forward-looking statements within the meaning of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. Such statements are based upon the current beliefs and expectations of Macys management and are subject to significant risks and uncertainties. Actual results could differ materially from those expressed in or implied by the forward-looking statements contained in this release because of a variety of factors, including conditions to, or changes in the timing of, proposed transactions, prevailing interest rates, competitive pressures from specialty stores, general merchandise stores, manufacturers' outlets, off-price and discount stores, new and established forms of home shopping (including the Internet, mail-order catalogs and television) and general consumer spending levels, including the impact of the availability and level of consumer debt, the effect of weather and other factors identified in documents filed by the company with the Securities and Exchange Commission.
(NOTE: Additional information on Macys, Inc., including past news releases, is available at http://www.macysinc.com/pressroom)
Macys, Inc.
Media - Jim Sluzewski, 513-579-7764
Investor - Susan Robinson, 513-579-7780
What a relief! My Macy’s is staying open...for now. I’d better get shopping, LOL!
(I only go there once a year at Christmas. They have some super-duper sales on housewares that make great gifts.)
However, two of my friends are going to be devastated. I’ll be able to hear the pulling of hair and the gnashing of teeth from here, once they open the e-mail link I just sent them. ;)
Pelican State ping
I hope the Macy’s stores in Louisiana are doing well. In the New Orleans metropolitan area, the chain reopened its Kenner store in October of last year after a 3-year closure following hurricane Katrina, and it opened a new one at Lakeside Mall in Metairie during the same time.
Macy’s would be doing better if they hired some employees and provided service in their stores. Even in New York, they’d have 10 registers on the floor - and one surly clerk at the one open register with a line of 15 people. I just used to abandon the items I was going to buy and leave after about 10 minutes not moving in the line. There were piles of clothing near the line, so I obviously wasn’t the only one who did this.
I hope the Macy's store in Plaza Las Américas is doing well.
The three Macy’s near us were giving things away in December...never saw anything like it in a store not going belly-up......yet.
The bargains were there, to be sure. My family and I went to one of our local Macy’s stores the days after Christmas and New Year’s and took advantage of discounts.
I’ve been to several Macy’s in my area. All look like upscale flea markets. They also have no customer service. I simply stopped even trying to shop there.
The one at Lakeside just opened up recently. Louisiana's economy isn't all that bad at this time but I really can't see the Greater New Orleans population being able to support another Macy's for any length of time. I hope I am wrong. I had to do most of my Christmas shopping at TJ Maxx this year because of pummeling investments so I hope others are weathering the storms better than I.
Are you kidding? The poor, oppressed people of the squalid Commonwealth of Puerto Rico are packing the shopping malls as much as ever!
“Macys would be doing better if they hired some employees and provided service in their stores.”
Exactly.
because several years back, Macys bought out Hecht co. here in the suburban VA area, we have TWO macys in some malls. i notice they aren’t on the list of those to be closed either!
Glad to see that our local store is staying open. Since she retired (at 83), my Mom’s only hobby has been shopping and Macy’s is her favorite. The clerks all know her by name and save things for her if they know a sale is coming up.
I love Macy’s. I hate to see any store closing though. I am a petite and the one in my town has a very nice and sizable petite department. Everyone in the U.S. isn’t a giant or fat (but you’d never know that by the sizes most places stock). Penney’s often does not even carry a small - they start with a few mediums and then a ton of larges. Ugh.
My Macy’s is great. I’d love to see Dillards hire some of the Macy’s people in my town. The Dillards is awful - had a clerk make me wait in line for several minutes while she chatted with her 4 year old granddaughter!!!!!
I have never ordered from Macy’s on-line. I like to try things on - you can’t ever know for sure until you try it on unless it’s something you’ve bought already and just want the same thing in more colors.
Almost store that is closing is in a state that voted for Obama.
They wanted change, right?
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