Dubai has become the second most popular retail hotspot for international brands, after London, global realty consultant CBRE has said. According to CB Richard Ellis’s (CBRE) annual report, Dubai is home to the second-highest number of international brands, about 55 per cent of the 294 retailers surveyed. It is close to the estimates of retailers [...]
Retail sales bounce back after dreadful start to 2010
Strong sales of homewares pushed up the value of sales by 1.9% from January and 4.9% on the same month last year, according to figures from the Office for National Statistics. The volume of sales increased at a slightly slower rate on a year earlier as shops took the opportunity to push up prices. Better-than-expected [...]
Williams-Sonoma holiday sales rise, ups Q4 view
(Reuters) – Williams-Sonoma Inc (WSM.N) reported a 7.4 percent rise in holiday revenue, prompting the home goods retailer to forecast fourth-quarter results above market estimates.
The operator of the Pottery Barn, West Elm and Williams-Sonoma chains has been helped by its decision to offer more lower-priced home decor items and improved holiday merchandise, driving in more shoppers.
For the holiday period ended December 27, sales increased 7.4 to $783 million.
The company expects fourth-quarter sales of $1.06 billion to $1.08 billion, with profit between 65 cents and 70 cents a share.
On an adjusted basis, the company expects earnings of 69 cents a share to 74 cents a share.
Analysts, on average, were expecting earnings of 50 cents a share, on revenue of $1.03 billion, according to Thomson Reuters I/B/E/S.
Shares of the company were up 1 percent at $23.05 Thursday. They had closed at $22.75 Wednesday on the New York Stock Exchange
(Reporting by Nivedita Bhattacharjee in Bangalore; Editing by Jarshad Kakkrakandy)
Family Dollar beats Street view, sending shares up
NEW YORK (Reuters) – Family Dollar Stores Inc (FDO.N) reported a higher-than-expected quarterly profit as the discount retailer drew more shoppers, and it forecast earnings for the current quarter above Wall Street estimates.
This quarter began on November 29, and Family Dollar estimated that sales at stores open at least a year rose 4 percent in the busy holiday shopping month of December.
The North Carolina retailer, which sells most of its merchandise for below $10, said net income rose 14 percent to $67.6 million, or 49 cents per share, in the first quarter that ended November 28 from $59.3 million, or 42 cents per share, a year earlier.
Analysts on average were expecting earnings of 47 cents per share, according to Thomson Reuters I/B/E/S.
Last month, Family Dollar reported that first-quarter net sales rose 3.9 percent to $1.82 billion, while same-store sales rose 2.4 percent — below its estimate for growth of 3 percent to 5 percent.
At the time, it said it still expected earnings to fall within its forecast of 45 cents to 50 cents per share.
For the second quarter, the retailer forecast same-store sales would rise by 2 percent to 4 percent, and that earnings per share would range from 65 cents to 70 cents. Wall Street analysts are forecasting a profit of 64 cents per share during the current quarter.
For the full fiscal year, Family Dollar forecast net sales will rise 4 percent to 6 percent, with earnings per share ranging from $2.15 to $2.35.
The company’s shares rose $1.51, or 5.5 percent, to $29.00 in premarket trading.
(Reporting by Phil Wahba and Nicole Maestri; Editing by Lisa Von Ahn)
John Lewis targets home comforts with new Poole store
The new John Lewis at Home store in Poole, which is opening in a few days. Photograph: Frank Baron
On the outskirts of Poole, just opposite an old-fashioned family butcher and a newsagent, a retail experiment gets under way tomorrow that could mark a whole new phase for middle England’s favourite shop.
Department store chain John Lewis – a high-street name synonymous with glossy, city centre developments – is gambling £6m on testing a small retail-park outlet called John Lewis at Home, which is not much more than a posh shed.
If it works – and the store chain intends to make a decision by January – the concept will be rolled out nationwide “at some pace”, according to the department store group’s managing director, Andy Street. He reckons there is room for up to 50 of these small outlets, which focus solely on homewares and stock none of the department store staples such as fashion, footwear, cosmetics or haberdashery. It is a major departure for the retailer, which can trace its history back more than 100 years but currently has only 28 stores, one of which – Cardiff – has only been open a month.
The idea is that the department store chain will get a huge boost if it can put a John Lewis outlet within a 40-minute drive of all UK shoppers. Currently less than 60% of the population have that access, so more stores are needed. They will pull in new shoppers and boost online sales, too, says the retailer, as more people order on the internet after seeing goods on display, or want to collect orders they have placed.
The new shed-shop, on the main road between Poole and Bournemouth and just a short drive from the multimillion-pound homes of Sandbanks, has some 40,000 sq ft of shopfloor space – about the same selling space as an average Asda devotes to food. It is the first time the retailer has ever moved into an existing retail unit and the store will stock 100,000 lines, compared to 350,000 in a full department store.
Courting success
Clad in grey and glass, and surrounded by manicured lawns and shrubs, it looks quite sophisticated for a retail-park outlet, especially one that was previously a Courts furniture shop and had stood derelict for five years following Courts’ collapse. Inside it is bright, white and wooden-floored.
Shoppers walk straight into the bedding department, complete with 28 different types of pillow. “It’s a killer assortment”, says Tim Harrison, the retailer’s head of new formats, who has developed this new-look shop. On ground level there’s also a bathroom department, with the retailer’s trademark wall of coloured towels, a lighting department with 750 different lamps, furnishing fabrics, a vast array of cushions, candles, curtains and gifts.
Up the stairs is a Christmas shop – which will disappear after the festive season in favour of garden furniture – kitchenware, an electricals department Harrison calls “authoritative” and a cafe. There is also a range of beds and furniture, though it is surprisingly limited and likely to be a disappointment to any shopper who thinks a John Lewis at Home store might be the place to start looking for a new sofa or sideboard.
There are also no mirrors, pictures, carpets, rugs or fitted kitchens.
“We had to draw the line somewhere,” says Harrison. “The John Lewis man in me wants to have it all, but we have had to make choices.” This selection, however, is not set in stone. They will make changes if shoppers want them and, in the meantime, there are computer terminals littered around the store to make online orders.
This week 150 new “partners”, as the employee-owned business calls its staff, were being put through their paces after three weeks of training in classrooms and the chain’s Southampton department store, some 45 minutes away. They are mostly locals, recruited new to the business from more than 1,200 applicants, many undoubtedly drawn to the retailer by its promise of annual profit sharing and a range of employee benefits that include John Lewis-owned holiday homes including one on nearby Brownsea Island, in the middle of Poole harbour.
John Lewis, which usually takes more than five years to take a new department store from first plans to cutting the red ribbon, has moved fast to open this one. Harrison started work on the idea back in January and it is just five months since the plan was made public.
Opting for plan B
The retailer has admitted the new John Lewis at Home format is a bit of a plan B. The group had previously announced plans to open at least 10 new full-size department stores and a number of half-size department stores. But the collapse in the commercial property market last year put almost all those expansion plans on hold as developers reassessed schemes and ran into trouble with funding. Only the new Stratford store near the Olympic site in east London is now certain to go ahead in the near future and ambitions for huge new stores in Leeds, Sheffield, Oxford, Portsmouth, Croydon and Crawley are on hold.
When the new strategy for out-of-town home stores was unveiled in May it looked risky. The recession had claimed several high-profile furniture retailers, including MFI, Ilva and New Heights, and it has also battered John Lewis. In September the department store chain unveiled a 50% collapse in half-year profits. The stores made just £21m, down from £43m in the same period last year and £54m in 2007.
Most of that damage was done by the homewares departments, which generate nearly one third of the retail chain’s total sales and an even bigger proportion of profits. Like-for-like homeware sales were down more than 8% as the moribund housing market hit sales of items such as fridges, furniture and curtain fabric, which are closely linked to the number of people moving home.
But the retailer insisted the downturn was an opportunity to cash in on cheap deals for unwanted out-of-town retail space, fill the gap left by collapsed rivals and lay the foundations for future growth – at a time when businesses owned by shareholders, who demand short-term returns on all investments, were constrained.
“This is really important for our future,” says Harrison. “We can make decisions like this because of the way we are structured. It doesn’t feel like a brave move. It feels exciting. We are really competent at homewares, so it is not so much of a risk.
“It feels like a John Lewis and looks like a John Lewis. When the doors open I want customers to love it.”
And they probably will – just so long as they are not looking for a sofa or a sideboard.
What recession? Neiman Marcus offering planes for Christmas
All yours for $250,000…the Neiman Marcus Christmas catalogue features the Icon A5 sports aircraft. Photograph: Neiman Marcus/Barcroft Media
For the person with extra space in the garage, an interest in challenging hobbies and a load of spare cash, an American store is offering the ultimate Christmas gift: A plane.
Neiman Marcus, the century-old upscale retailer, offers in its Christmas catalogue a $250,000 (£152,000) package that includes an Icon A5 “light sport aircraft” with luxury appointments and flight training for two.
The plane is so far on the cutting edge it will not be available for delivery until late 2011, disappointing would-be Amelia Earharts and Charles Lindberghs hoping to fly to New Year’s dinner with the in-laws in the next county.
“The kids are healthy. The careers are under control… You’ve earned something special, just for the two of you,” the catalogue proposes. “Something amazing, exciting, and most certainly romantic. How about turning sci-fi into reality with a his and hers luxury sports vehicle—in the air.”
The two-seat, amphibious A5 features folding spy wings to tuck into the garage beside the Mercedes Benz, and at less than 598 kilograms (1,320 pounds) empty, it is easy to tow.
The A5 hits the market after a concerted effort by hobbyists and the US government to make it easier to obtain a basic recreational pilot’s license.
The number of US fliers has declined about a quarter in the past 25 years, as men trained to fly in the second world war and the Korean war age out of the sport. In 2004 the federal aviation administration created a new “light sport” category of small, easy-to-fly aircraft that takes about half the training time and cost as a traditional private pilot license.
Light sport aircraft typically fly below 10,000 feet, and pilots may fly only during the day in clear weather. The planes have a minimum of instrumentation. Icon offers an optional parachute, should the A5 fail in flight, and a dock for the pilot’s MP3 player.
“It helps people step into flight,” said Dick Knapinski, spokesman for the Experimental Aircraft Association, of the light sport planes. “Here is something that people can control and feel more comfortable in, and really build their own time and their own logbook.”
The A5 and other light sport aircraft fit two people, so owners need not worry about ferrying the kids to football practice.
A popular use, according to Knapinski: The “$100 hamburger” – a trip at 10,000 feet for a meal.
Transformers and GI Joe toy sales transform fortunes for Hasbro
Transformers have turned into profits for US toymaker Hasbro. Photograph: PR
The popularity of Transformers and GI Joe toys, combined with cost-cutting measures, have helped Hasbro post higher profits for the third quarter.
The Transformers line, which spawned the eponymous movie blockbusters, is one of Hasbro’s biggest sellers. The second-largest US toymaker has moved away from traditional toys to pursue an entertainment-related strategy. This has paid off during the recession when other toymakers, such as Mattel, suffered lower profits.
Hasbro’s chief executive, Brian Goldner, said: “Transformers continue to do exceedingly well and we expect Transformers to sell well through this year.” In 2007, the toys generated sales of $484m (£297m).
Goldner said he expected Transformers to continue to be a big contributor next year. Toys based on the third movie in the Transformers series are due to hit the shelves next July.
GI Joe, My Little Pony and Star Wars toys are benefiting from related TV programmes, such as the Star Wars animated Clone Wars series.
Hasbro reported an 8.8% rise in profits to $150.4m, or 99 cents a share, in the three months to 27 September. The results beat Wall Street expectations of 93 cents a share.
However, the company’s joint venture with Discovery Communications dented earnings per share by 3 cents.
Revenues fell by 2% to $1.28bn from $1.3bn a year ago.
Hasbro said its sales performance in North America, and internationally, reflected stronger sales of toys for boys, but this was offset by weaker sales of girls’ and pre-school toys, and games and puzzles.
The company’s revenues from entertainment and licensing more than doubled to $41.5m due to Transformers and GI Joe. The company has made Transformers models – typically an object such as a car which can be turned into a robot – since the 1980s. The popularity of the franchise has been boosted by the 2007 Transformers movie, and this year’s sequel, Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen.
Goldner is confident of achieving higher revenues this year compared to last if consumer trends continue to “improve in line with recent fourth-quarter trends”.
Last week, the country’s biggest toymaker, Mattel, reported a 3.5% fall in profits, with sales down 8%. Mattel makes Hot Wheels and American Girl dolls.





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