03-11-2018, 12:19 AM
A high-profiler retailer dies.
Toys R Us is preparing to close all its stores in a total liquidation, according to multiple reports, with the iconic retailer having spent the past several months attempting to find a path to survival through a Chapter 11 bankruptcy proceeding.
Bloomberg and the Wall Street Journal cited multiple unnamed sources who blamed the development on weak holiday sales that in turn ratcheted up pressure from lenders owed $5 billion. A formal announcement could come as soon as Monday, with the company still holding out hope for a midnight rescue offer.
A Toys R Us closure would have immediate ramifications for workers at the stores, which double as outlets for its Babies R Us brand — in regulatory disclosures for previous store closings nationally, Toys R Us has listed between 50 and 80 workers in each location.
But the company’s vendors who extended merchandise or credit on the promise of payment stand to lose, as well, including Lego, which has its U.S. headquarters in Enfield. Other Toys R Us and Babies R Us suppliers with local ties include Wilton-based Melissa & Doug; Compass Diversified Holdings in Westport, which owns the Ergobaby line of infant carriers; Jakks Pacific, which sells action figures under license with Stamford-based WWE; and Newell Brands, which has a corporate office in Norwalk and its umbrella of brands including Graco and Baby Jogger.
“It’s really incumbent upon (companies) like us to make sure that, as those stores come out, that we’re actively marketing to the consumer and trying to drive her to an alternative location where she can find our products in the price tier that she’s shopping in,” said Michael Polk, CEO of Newell Brands, speaking to investment analysts in mid-February. “That’s a little bit of the ‘inside baseball’ type of details that are going on in the baby business right now.”
Also exposed in any liquidation are landlords, with Toys R Us having pressed for better rent terms the past several months.
Wayne, N.J.-based Toys R Us was already in the process of closing two Connecticut stores in Newington and North Haven, while intending to push ahead with southwestern Connecticut locations in Danbury, Norwalk and Milford; as well as in Waterbury and Manchester after reversing prior plans to close the two.
https://www.thehour.com/business/article...740742.php
Toys R Us is preparing to close all its stores in a total liquidation, according to multiple reports, with the iconic retailer having spent the past several months attempting to find a path to survival through a Chapter 11 bankruptcy proceeding.
Bloomberg and the Wall Street Journal cited multiple unnamed sources who blamed the development on weak holiday sales that in turn ratcheted up pressure from lenders owed $5 billion. A formal announcement could come as soon as Monday, with the company still holding out hope for a midnight rescue offer.
A Toys R Us closure would have immediate ramifications for workers at the stores, which double as outlets for its Babies R Us brand — in regulatory disclosures for previous store closings nationally, Toys R Us has listed between 50 and 80 workers in each location.
But the company’s vendors who extended merchandise or credit on the promise of payment stand to lose, as well, including Lego, which has its U.S. headquarters in Enfield. Other Toys R Us and Babies R Us suppliers with local ties include Wilton-based Melissa & Doug; Compass Diversified Holdings in Westport, which owns the Ergobaby line of infant carriers; Jakks Pacific, which sells action figures under license with Stamford-based WWE; and Newell Brands, which has a corporate office in Norwalk and its umbrella of brands including Graco and Baby Jogger.
“It’s really incumbent upon (companies) like us to make sure that, as those stores come out, that we’re actively marketing to the consumer and trying to drive her to an alternative location where she can find our products in the price tier that she’s shopping in,” said Michael Polk, CEO of Newell Brands, speaking to investment analysts in mid-February. “That’s a little bit of the ‘inside baseball’ type of details that are going on in the baby business right now.”
Also exposed in any liquidation are landlords, with Toys R Us having pressed for better rent terms the past several months.
Wayne, N.J.-based Toys R Us was already in the process of closing two Connecticut stores in Newington and North Haven, while intending to push ahead with southwestern Connecticut locations in Danbury, Norwalk and Milford; as well as in Waterbury and Manchester after reversing prior plans to close the two.
https://www.thehour.com/business/article...740742.php
The ideal subject of totalitarian rule is not the convinced Nazi or the dedicated Communist but instead the people for whom the distinction between fact and fiction, true and false, no longer exists -- Hannah Arendt.