retail | Stash Learn Mon, 21 Aug 2023 17:43:44 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.4.2 https://stashlearn.wpengine.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/12/android-chrome-192x192-1.png retail | Stash Learn 32 32 Why Pier 1 is Walking the Plank https://www.stash.com/learn/why-pier-1-is-walking-the-plank/ Thu, 06 Feb 2020 18:36:32 +0000 https://learn.stashinvest.com/?p=14209 Brick-and-mortar stores rack up losses as online sales continue to rise.

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Update: On February 4, 2020, Macy’s announced that it will close 125 stores and lay off an estimated 2,000 employees as it tries to cut costs. Additionally, Macy’s will move its corporate headquarters to New York City and will shut down offices in Cincinnati and San Francisco.  Macy’s says it plans to focus on discount clothing store Backstage by opening 50 new Backstage stores in 2020. Macy’s announced additional store closures in January, 2019.

Despite the retail industry’s strong Black Friday and Cyber Monday performance in 2019, some brick-and-mortar stores such as Macy’s and Pier 1 Imports are reportedly closing hundreds of locations as they face declining sales.

Closing Soon

On January 8, 2020, Macy’s Inc., the parent company of Macy’s, Bloomingdale’s, and Bluemercury reported a 0.6% decline in sales in November and December 2019. This news followed Macy’s November, 2019, third-quarter earnings report, which shows a 3.9% decrease in sales following seven consecutive quarters of growth.

Macy’s, which employs 130,000 people, will reportedly close 28 of its stores and 1 Bloomingdale’s store throughout the United States in an attempt to increase its profits, according to sources. Macy’s will announce which stores will close on February 5, 2020. (In 2016, it announced the shuttering of 100 locations, following six consecutive quarters of losses.)

Macy’s CEO Jeff Gennette said in a press release that website issues, lower tourism rates, and weak performance in certain malls caused the dip in sales. He also cited a warmer shopping season as a reason for the drop. Shopping trends may actually change with the weather according to the Bureau of Economic Analysis (BEA). The BEA accounts for how weather patterns can affect data when it calculates the Gross Domestic Product, or GDP.

Department stores are reportedly struggling to keep up with the rise of discount stores such as Target and Walmart, which have adapted more quickly to the consumer shift toward online shopping, and also offer a wider variety of products to consumers, often at cheaper prices. They also compete with online-only retailers like Amazon that offer steep discounts and quick delivery times.

Meanwhile, home goods store Pier 1 Imports announced an 11.4% drop in sales from the previous year on January 6, 2020. This most recent quarter of losses is the latest in a series of nine quarters of losses for Pier 1 for a net loss of $59 million, according to Forbes. As a result, Pier 1 will close half or 450 of its stores nationwide.

Pier 1 will also reportedly lay off 40% of its employees and prepare to file for Chapter 11 bankruptcy. The company employed 4,000 people as of March, 2019. The rise of e-commerce businesses such as the furniture company Wayfair have contributed to Pier 1’s losses, according to Bloomberg.

Online Traffic is Up, Foot Traffic is Down

In 2019, online retail sales on Black Friday and Cyber Monday broke records, with shoppers spending $9.4 billion on Cyber Monday, according to Adobe Analytics. While online sales may be surging, foot traffic on the traditional shopping weekend to so-called brick and mortar stores fell by 6.2%, according to reports.

Macy’s and Pier 1 aren’t the only brick-and-mortar stores falling on hard times. In fact, the traditional retail industry has experienced significant problems in recent years, with several physical stores filing for bankruptcy or closing locations including J.C. Penney, RadioShack, Payless ShoeSource, and The Limited.

More about the Retail Industry

Since 2017, the retail industry has lost 140,000 jobs, according to recent reports.

The retail industry is also one of the largest segments of the economy, generating nearly $5 trillion in sales in the first ten months of 2019, according to the U.S. Census Bureau. That’s roughly one-quarter of the GDP, which is the total of all goods and services the economy produces.

Retail is also a big employer. About 16 million people work for U.S. retailers, or one in nine people, according to recent reports. Nearly 5 million people work as retail salespeople, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics. The impending closures and layoffs at Macy’s and Pier 1 could affect thousands of retail employees.

Follow the Stash Way

Investing in the retail sector is one way to diversify your portfolio. Diversifying is part of the Stash Way. When you’ve diversified your portfolio, it will hold a variety of investments that are not all subject to the same market risks, including stocks, bonds, and cash, as well as mutual funds and exchange-traded funds (ETFs).

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What It Means When a Company Gets Delisted https://www.stash.com/learn/what-it-means-when-a-company-gets-delisted/ Fri, 30 Aug 2019 16:00:11 +0000 https://learn.stashinvest.com/?p=13358 All about J.C. Penney’s warning note that its shares may be taken off the NYSE.

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UPDATE: J.C. Penney executives have been buying up the company’s stock since the New York Stock Exchange warned it about delisting, according to sources. JCP chairman Ron Tysoe purchased 1 million shares on August 19, 2019, according to reports. A week later, Jill Soltau, the company’s chief executive officer, reportedly bought 500,000 shares. J.C. Penney’s stock still traded under $1 as of August 30, 2019.


Department store chain J.C. Penney may get delisted from the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE), where its stock has traded for nearly 90 years.

Penney, based in Plano, Texas, received a warning letter from the NYSE, because its stock has traded below $1, on average, for 30 consecutive trading days, according to reports.

In order to remain listed on any exchange, a company’s stock generally must remain above $1 a share. Typically a company will be sent something called a compliance letter from the exchange on which it lists when its stock price falls below that amount, giving it about six months to get its act together.

What does it mean for a company when its stock gets delisted?

  • It’s not a good sign for the company when it’s either in danger of, or actually does get delisted. Generally speaking, it means that the company is having financial trouble, which could include declining sales, bankruptcy, or some other difficulty.
  • Different exchanges have different rules, but generally speaking, when a company’s shares falls below the $1 threshold for an extended period of time, the stock may get delisted.
  • When a company is delisted, it gets kicked off the exchange, and its shares stop trading there.
  • The company may then go on to trade on a smaller exchange, also called an “over the counter” exchange, or through something called the pink sheets.
  • Typically, before its stock is delisted, the company has about six months to get its share price back up.
  • To boost the value of its shares, a company may do something called a reverse stock split.  With a reverse stock split, a company reduces the number of shares it has for sale, which can drive up the value of the shares. It’s the opposite of a stock split, where a company increases the number of shares it has outstanding, to make the shares more affordable. (Remember the law of supply and demand: When there is more of something, it can decrease demand and price. When there is less of something, it can drive up value.)
  • A company may also be delisted if its market cap, or total dollar value on the market, falls below a certain amount over a 30-day period. In the case of the NYSE, that dollar value is $15 million.
  • Good to know: If you own stock that is delisted, you still own the shares.

Read more about exchanges here.

What’s going on with the retail sector

The retail sector is one of the largest parts of the economy, with more than 1 million private stores, and approximately $300 billion in monthly sales, according to the National Retail Federation trade group.

But the traditional retail sector has been in a slump in recent years, as it competes increasingly with online-only retailers.

In the first four months of 2019, U.S. retailers shut down nearly 6,000 stores, according to reports.

Find out more about the retail sector here.

More about J.C. Penney

Penney has been losing money for years, including a $154 million loss in the first quarter of 2019. The company has lost nearly 90% of its value in recent years, with a current market cap of about $200 million. (Compare that to Amazon’s valuation of nearly $1 trillion.)

The retailer is also seriously in debt, owing nearly $4 billion.

Penney operates 800 stores in the U.S., but closed 18 stores in 2019, and nearly 150 in 2017 and 2018, according to reports.

It first listed its stock on the NYSE in 1929.

Other companies in danger of being delisted

Earlier in 2019, drugstore chain Rite Aid was nearly delisted from the NYSE. It was able to get its stock price above the required level, and allowed to continue trading, however. Pier One Imports also received a compliance letter about its share price in February, 2019, and another one in August, for its low market cap.

Remember the Stash Way

Investing can be confusing, especially when it comes to investing in single stocks, which can be particularly volatile.

That’s why we’ve boiled down our investing philosophy into three basic principles that we hope can guide you as you make your first investing decisions. We call our approach the Stash Way. Here are its three pillars:

  • Invest for the long-term
  • Invest regularly
  • Diversify

You can learn more about the Stash Way here.

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Amazon vs. Walmart: Inside the Battle to Sell You Everything https://www.stash.com/learn/amazon-vs-walmart/ Mon, 22 Oct 2018 14:00:57 +0000 https://learn.stashinvest.com/?p=11401 Monster match-up: Who will win the war for your wallet?

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Amazon and Walmart are the two titans of the retail world.

Together, they ring up nearly half-a-trillion dollars worth of sales—that’s more revenue each year than the next top five retailers combined, according to the National Retail Federation.

But one is the king of eCommerce, specializing in crunching consumer data and delivery logistics, while the other is a behemoth in the old world of bricks and mortar transactions, at home with shopping carts and Black Friday super deals.

Yet increasingly, Amazon and Walmart are going neck in neck for customers, each competing for the territory of the other. While Amazon has attempted to cross over into physical world sales, Walmart has invested heavily in its online presence.

Who will win the war for your wallet? We take a deeper look at both businesses, and you decide.

Amazon vs Walmart

Founders:

Amazon: Jeff Bezos
Walmart: 
Sam Walton

Year founded:

Amazon: 1994
Walmart: 
1962

Market Cap:

Amazon:  $900 billion
Walmart: 
$290 billion

Revenues:

Amazon: $178 billion
Walmart: 
$500 billion annually, as of fiscal year 2018

Number of employees:

Amazon: 566,000
Walmart: 
1.5 million

Who owns what?

In addition to consumer-facing businesses such as Zappos, Twitch, and Whole Foods, Amazon owns a suite of tech businesses including cloud services company Amazon Web Services, membership services division Prime, and consumer electronics such as Alexa and Echo products, Kindle, and Fire.

Amazon also owns other e-commerce companies, including Souq.com, which specializes in retail sales in the Middle East.

Walmart owns numerous other retailers both in the US and around the globe, such as men’s fashion wear company Bonobos, online retailer Jet.com, and the membership-only wholesale warehouse chain Sam’s Club. It also owns e-Commerce company Flipkart, of India.

It also has a toe into the world of streaming media. The company announced plans to get into the binge-watching subscription television space with Vudu, in order to compete with Netflix, Amazon, and Hulu.

Amazon’s strengths

Amazon practically invented e-Commerce, and today controls nearly half of all online sales.

Two-thirds of all consumers in the U.S. have bought from Amazon and nearly one-third purchase from it at least once a month, according to reports. With the recent acquisition of the high-end grocery chain Whole Foods, Amazon has also planted a stake in the ground for physical world sales.

More than a million small businesses today also sell on the Amazon marketplace.

Amazon’s weaknesses

Other online retailers are gunning for its territory.

In 2016, Walmart purchased the online retailer Jet.com, in what analysts said was an attempt to compete directly with Amazon. Overseas, it also faces big competition from companies including e-commerce company Alibaba—which sells to 500 million consumers in China alone.

Walmart’s strengths

By sales volume, Walmart is the largest retailer in the nation, and nearly every American has shopped at Walmart, according to industry data. It specializes in the race to the bottom prices, by squeezing suppliers to offer the lowest cost merchandise they can possibly produce.

Walmart weaknesses

Every year, more consumers shop online, and Walmart has had to play catch up with its digital sales strategy. Its purchase of Jet.com for $3 billion in 2016, according to experts, demonstrated its intention not to be caught napping.

Meanwhile, Walmart estimates digital sales for the company will increase by 40% in 2018. Smaller superstores such as Costco and Target are nipping at its heels.

Want a piece of retail giants?  You can invest in stocks and funds that focus on the business of retail on Stash.

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Sears is Filing for Bankruptcy: What’s Bankruptcy, Anyway? https://www.stash.com/learn/sears-filing-for-bankruptcy/ Mon, 15 Oct 2018 18:57:33 +0000 https://learn.stashinvest.com/?p=11567 The iconic retailer is drowning in debt

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Sears, the iconic retailer that invented the idea of the modern department store, is filing for bankruptcy.

Sears has found it hard to compete in the era of online sales, dominated by Amazon, and in the era of big-box stores, ruled over by Walmart, Target, Home Depot and others, according to industry experts.

The 130-year-old chain is also drowning in debt and needs to repay $134 million in loans early this week, according to reports.

But Sears has been in decline for years. Just ten years ago, the company had 300,000 employees. Today, plagued by falling sales, it has fewer than 70,000 workers, according to reports.

Here are the details:

  • The chain will close 186 unprofitable stores, according to its press release.
  • Sears’ chief executive officer Eddie Lampert will step down and will be replaced by three other top executives at the company.
  • Lampert owns a hedge fund called ESL, which has loaned Sears close to $1 billion.
  • Sears also owns Kmart; many of its stores are also set to close.
  • Sears has secured at least $600 million in post-bankruptcy financing to help reorganize the company, according to its press release.
  • The company’s last profitable year was 2010, and it has reportedly lost $12 billion since then and closed 2,800 stores since 2005.

What is bankruptcy?

Businesses file for bankruptcy to protect themselves from creditors, which are entities or people that have loaned them money. They typically go through a court-mediated process, called Chapter 11, that allows them to reorganize and round up financing to continue operations, as well as discharge some of their debts.

In contrast, consumers can file for something called Chapter 7 or Chapter 13, which are also court-mediate processes that allow them to get rid of debts. With Chapter 13, debts are not liquidated completely, and a repayment plan for some of the debt is drafted.

The story of Sears

Sears was founded in 1893, as Sears, Roebuck &  Co. It started out as a catalog company selling watches and jewelry and opened its first department stores in the 1920s. Its catalog ultimately expanded to include hundreds of pages, selling everything from clothing to kit houses delivered by railroad.

In its heyday, it dominated the 20th-century retail landscape, even launching brands like Craftsman tools and Kenmore appliances. It shipped to nearly every U.S. home, was the first department store to create parking lots outside its stores to accommodate customers, and to stay open seven days a week, according to reports.

Interesting fact: It also launched Allstate Insurance and the Discover credit card.

Tough times for retail

Sears’ bankruptcy comes at a time when other high-profile retail stores are also going out of business.

These include Toys R Us, which closed down in March, and RadioShack, Payless Shoe Source, and The Limited.

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These Famous, Successful Companies Were All Founded by Military Veterans https://www.stash.com/learn/these-famous-successful-companies-were-all-founded-by-military-veterans/ Fri, 01 Jun 2018 16:00:48 +0000 https://learn.stashinvest.com/?p=10027 Vets are leading the way in all sorts of industries, from retail, to coffee roasters, to construction.

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The military can teach you more than just strategy and chain of command. It can also teach you to be rough and tough with your money, and offer the discipline required to succeed in the business world.

While many military veterans struggle financially when they leave the service, many have succeeded in taking what they’ve learned during their time in uniform and applying it to the private sector.

These days, veterans are founding companies in all sorts of industries, including telecommunications, retail, finance, coffee companies, construction firms, and manufacturing, to name a few.

“Every day I use the lessons and discipline I learned in the Marine Corps. – Bob Parsons, GoDaddy founder

Here are some of the biggest, most successful companies founded by American veterans.

1. Walmart

The country’s biggest private company–and its largest private employer–was founded by Sam Walton. Walton served as a captain in the Army during World War II, from 1942 until 1945, as did his brother and co-founder, Bud, who was a Navy pilot in the Pacific theater.

Walmart (WMT) was started with $5,000 saved from the Walton’s military days, with the original store opening up in Bentonville, Arkansas in 1951.

2. Nike

“Just Do It” could very well be the motto for any military branch, as well as Nike’s slogan. It makes sense then that Nike (NKE), the Oregon-based athletic company, was co-founded by an Army veteran, Phil Knight.

Knight enlisted in the army after graduating from the University of Oregon in 1959, serving one year, and ultimately serving in the reserves for seven years.

3. FedEx

Before getting into the shipping business, FedEx (FDX) founder Fred Smith led an adventurous life. After attending Yale (where he came up with the initial idea for FedEx), Smith joined the Marines and served two tours in Vietnam, and was almost killed during an enemy ambush.

After returning home, Smith raised more than $90 million in venture capital, and FedEx started shipping in 1973.

4. Kinder Morgan

Kinder Morgan (KMI), one of the biggest energy companies in the U.S., was founded by Richard Kinder, a veteran of the Vietnam War. Prior to starting the company with his co-founder William Morgan in 1997, Kinder served in the Army as a Captain.

Before joining the Army, however, Kinder went to law school at the University of Missouri, which allowed him to serve as a Judge Advocate General officer, or a military lawyer.

5. GoDaddy

Web registration company GoDaddy (GDDY) was founded in 1997 by Bob Parsons. Parsons, too, was a veteran of the Vietnam War, having enlisted in the Marine Corps in 1968. While in Vietnam, Parsons became a decorated soldier, earning a Purple Heart, the Combat Action Ribbon, and Vietnamese Cross of Gallantry.

“Every day I use the lessons and discipline I learned in the Marine Corps,” Parsons says on his website. “I absolutely would not be where I am today without the experiences I had in the Marine Corps.”

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Retailers Rejoice! Black Friday and Cyber Monday Racked Up Record Sales https://www.stash.com/learn/retailers-rejoice-black-friday/ Wed, 29 Nov 2017 00:53:52 +0000 http://learn.stashinvest.com/?p=7075 Shoppers turned out in droves to snag deals in stores and online.

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Retailers are already having a happy holiday season.

Traditional retailers and online stores racked up record sales on Black Friday and Cyber Monday, as shoppers turned out in droves to snag deals on items including laptops, toys, mobile devices and gaming consoles. Stores they visited included Best Buy, Macy’s, Target, and Toys ‘R’ Us.

Online retail king Amazon beat all other competitors for online sales over the weekend.

Black Friday and Cyber Monday, respectively the Friday and Monday following the Thanksgiving holiday, are two of the most important shopping days of the year for retailers.

The strong sales are a welcome relief and promise a good start to the holiday buying season for so-called bricks and mortar stores that operate in physical locations. Such stores have struggled to attract shoppers in recent years.

Here are some numbers:

Sales on Cyber Monday, a day devoted to online bargains, hit a record $6.59 billion. That’s an increase of nearly 17% compared to 2016, according to reports.

Online retailers bagged nearly $8 billion on Thanksgiving and Black Friday, up nearly 18% compared to 2016, according to Reuters.

The strong turnout is good news for the traditional retail sector, which has experienced a steep decline in sales in recent years.

Foot traffic to bricks and mortar stores decreased less than 1% on Black Friday, compared to 2016, according to industry reports. Consumers still spent a record $5 billion that day, with 54% of online shopping visits coming from mobile devices.

Good news for the slumping brick and mortar retail sector?

The strong turnout is good news for the traditional retail sector, which has experienced a steep decline in sales in recent years.

Chain stores including RadioShack, Payless Shoe Source, and The Limited have filed for bankruptcy in recent years. Once big name retailers such as Sears and J.C. Penney have also closed locations. And In the first four months of 2017, the retail sector lost 72,000 jobs, according to a recent report by Bloomberg Businessweek.

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The retail industry is also one of the largest segments of the economy, generating nearly $5 trillion in sales in 2016, according to the U.S. Census Bureau.

Retail is also a big employer. About 16 million people work for U.S. retailers, or one in nine people, according to recent reports. More than 8 million people work as retail salespeople and cashiers, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics.

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End of a (Retail) Era: Sears and Whirlpool Part Ways https://www.stash.com/learn/sears-and-whirlpool-part-ways/ Tue, 24 Oct 2017 23:45:03 +0000 http://learn.stashinvest.com/?p=6880 Sears reportedly said it will no longer sell Whirlpool brand products due to a pricing disagreement.

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The Maytag Man will stop making appearances at Sears.

The national retailer said it will no longer sell Whirlpool brand products due to a pricing disagreement, according to reports. In addition to Maytag, Whirlpool manufactures Amana and Kitchenaid appliances, among other brands.

“Whirlpool has sought to use its dominant position in the marketplace to make demands that would have prohibited us from offering Whirlpool products to our members at a reasonable price,” an internal memo obtained by the Wall Street Journal and distributed to Sears employees reportedly reads.

The end of a long partnership

The sales partnership between Sears, based in Chicago, Illinois, and Whirlpool stretches back more than 100 years, when Whirlpool was known as Upton Machine Company. At the time, Sears took a stake in Upton, which gave it the capital to expand and ultimately become Whirlpool.

Sears has faced increasing competition from online sellers such as Amazon, as well as home supply discounters like Home Depot

Sears, which launched in 1893 as catalogue company Sears, Roebuck & Co., was once the nation’s largest retailer, maintaining that position into the late 1980s. Whirlpool is one of the largest appliance manufacturers in the U.S., where it’s responsible for 35% of all sales for washers. It has been raising prices to cover the costs of raw materials, according to reports.

Tough times for Sears

Sears has struggled in recent years with declining sales as so-called brick and mortar stores have faced increasing competition from online sellers such as Amazon, as well as home supply discounters including Home Depot.

Sears’ stock price has fallen by nearly half in the past year, and it hasn’t had any revenue growth in close to a decade, Bloomberg reports. It has also closed hundreds of stores in the last year, including numerous Kmart locations, which are part of its business.

For its part, Whirlpool’s stock has decreased by 4% in the past year, but it has increased 72% over the last five years.

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Here are more details:

Sears will sell Whirlpool products, which include Amana, Maytag, and Kitchenaid, until it runs out of inventory. It will instead focus on other appliance brands LG, Samsung, GE, Frigidaire, Electrolux, and Bosch, according to USA Today.

In order to stay afloat, Sears is in the middle of restructuring its business, which includes more than $1 billion in cost cutting, consolidation of business units, and debt reduction.

Sales to Sears made up only 3% of Whirlpool’s total revenue, according to the Wall Street Journal.

The stock of both companies fell following news of the break up.

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Bucking the Retail Slump: Walmart Powers Ahead https://www.stash.com/learn/bucking-retail-slump-walmart-powers-ahead/ Sat, 19 Aug 2017 03:10:08 +0000 http://learn.stashinvest.com/?p=6073 When it comes to declining retail sales, Walmart never got the memo.

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The traditional retail sector may be in something of a slump, but Walmart never got that memo.

Walmart, based in Bentonville, Arkansas, reported strong financial results for its second quarter on Thursday. The world’s largest retailer, which has annual revenue of nearly $500 billion, is benefitting from pouring cash into increasing in-store customer experiences, and amping up its online presence, financial analysts say.

Here are some highlights from Walmart’s second quarter earnings report:

  • Revenue, or customer sales, increased 2.1% to $124 billion.
  • Its comparable store sales increased 1.8%. This metric, sometimes referred to as same-store sales, compares the second quarter sales for Walmart stores that have been open for at least one year, to their sales in the same quarter a year earlier. Retailers use same-store sales data to get a clear picture of store performance. This is Walmart’s 12th consecutive quarter of same-store sales increases, according to the retailer.
  • Walmart’s same-store traffic also ticked up 1.3%.
  • The company’s operating expenses, or amount of cash it spent in the quarter, levered up about 4% as it increased expenditures on its ecommerce offering.

Walmart is increasingly going head to head with ecommerce king Amazon, which dominates sales in the online world. Walmart has made significant investments in its own ecommerce offerings in recent years, including through its 2016 purchase of Jet.com for $3 billion, which helped it increase its distribution network for online sales, analysts say.

Both Walmart and Amazon are also competing over grocery sales. Amazon’s recent purchase of Whole Foods signalled its intent to become a serious player in that sector, experts say. Similarly, Walmart gets more than half of its revenue from food sales, which also contributed to strong growth in the quarter, the company said in its earnings report.

Key takeaways: While the retail segment has been in a slump for the past year or more, there are bright spots. Walmart is one of them. The company posted strong earnings for its most recent quarter, thanks to online and grocery sales.

You may also want to read: What to Make of All the Layoffs in the Retail Industry

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What to Make of All the Layoffs in the Retail Industry https://www.stash.com/learn/make-layoffs-retail-industry/ Wed, 09 Aug 2017 02:30:55 +0000 http://learn.stashinvest.com/?p=5994 Stash explains why the retail sector has been in a slump.

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Whether it’s going to the mall or taking a stroll down Main Street, Americans love to go shopping. In fact, consumer spending powers about two thirds of the U.S. economy, according to the U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis.

But the retail sector has been in a slump in recent years.

What is the retail industry?

The retail industry is filled with big name brands you probably use almost on a daily basis. We’re talking about companies like Best Buy, Costco, Home Depot, J.C. Penney, Target, and Walmart, to name just a few.

These companies are often called bricks and mortar stores, because unlike online competitors like Amazon, they operate from physical stores where consumers come in to shop around and make their purchases.

But many of these stores are experiencing difficulties, because the way people are spending money is reportedly changing.

Retail sector: The challenges

Scores of retail stores have filed for bankruptcy or closed their doors in the past year, including RadioShack, Payless Shoe Source, and The Limited. And in the first four months of the year, the sector lost 72,000 jobs, according to a recent report by Bloomberg Businessweek.

That’s potentially a big problem because retail is also one of the largest segments of the economy, generating nearly $5 trillion in sales in 2016, according to the U.S. Census Bureau. That’s roughly one third of the Gross Domestic Product, or GDP, which is the total of all goods and services the economy produces.

Retail is also a big employer.

About 16 million people work for U.S. retailers, or one in nine people, according to recent reports. More than 8 million people work as retail salespeople and cashiers, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics. That’s about five percent of the entire U.S. labor force.

So what’s going on?

  • Increasing numbers of shoppers prefer to make their purchases online. E-commerce shopping is expected to grow by more than 40% to about $500 billion by 2020, according to research firm Forrester. Of course, Amazon is the 800 pound gorilla in online shopping, and in recent years it’s made big inroads in shopping, with easy return policies and services like Prime, which promise to get users deliveries within two days.
  • But even some of the traditional retailers are launching their own e-commerce divisions, which can cut down on sales at bricks and mortar stores. And it turns out they are automating jobs that used to be done by people.
  • There’s an oversupply of malls. And when big anchor tenants–the Macy’s and Sears of the world–don’t do well and decide to leave, there’s a spillover effect, reducing traffic to other retail stores.
  • People appear to be spending their money in different ways–like going out more for dinner more, for vacations, and on the ever-increasing cost of health care, according to a recent report in The Economist.

Is there any good news for the retail sector?

It’s not all gloom and doom however. While e-commerce is certainly a growth opportunity for jobs, U.S. consumers still prefer to shop in stores for most products, according to this report.

The Bureau of Labor Statistics forecasts the number of traditional retail sales jobs to continue growing by 5% through 2024.

Key takeaways:

Consumer spending fuels the U.S. economy, and the retail sector is one of the biggest employers in the U.S. In recent years, the traditional retail industry has suffered from weaker sales and layoffs as e-commerce sales have continued to gain ground. Still, U.S. consumers still prefer to shop in stores for most items.

The post What to Make of All the Layoffs in the Retail Industry appeared first on Stash Learn.

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What’s Causing the Retail Slump? https://www.stash.com/learn/retail-industry-slow-down/ Mon, 31 Jul 2017 20:31:24 +0000 http://learn.stashinvest.com/?p=5913 Sales at online retailers are booming, but consumers still like to shop at real stores.

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Whether it’s going to the mall or taking a stroll down Main Street, Americans love to go shopping. In fact, consumer spending powers about two thirds of the U.S. economy, according to the U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis.

But the retail sector has been in a slump in recent years, and that’s potentially a cause for concern for the many people who work in the industry, including many who invest on Stash.

What is the retail industry?

The retail industry is filled with big name brands you probably use almost on a daily basis. We’re talking about companies like Best Buy, Costco, Home Depot, J.C. Penney, Target, and Walmart, to name just a few.

These companies are often called bricks and mortar stores, because unlike online competitors like Amazon, they operate from physical stores where consumers come in to shop around and make their purchases.

But many of these stores are experiencing difficulties, because the way people are spending money is reportedly changing.

Retail sector: The challenges

In fact, scores of retail stores have filed for bankruptcy or closed their doors in the past year, including RadioShack, Payless Shoe Source, and The Limited. And In the first four months of the year, the sector lost 72,000 jobs, according to a recent report by Bloomberg Businessweek.

That’s potentially a big problem because retail is also one of the largest segments of the economy, generating nearly $5 trillion in sales in 2016, according to the U.S. Census Bureau. That’s roughly one third of the Gross Domestic Product, or GDP, which is the total of all goods and services the economy produces.

Retail is also a big employer. About 16 million people work for U.S. retailers, or one in nine people, according to recent reports. More than 8 million people work as retail salespeople and cashiers, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics. That’s about five percent of the entire U.S. labor force.

And a slump in retail is likely to hit home for those of you who invest with Stash. Of those who have reported the industry in which they work, roughly 40% say they’re employed by the biggest U.S. retailers.

So what’s going on?

  • Increasing numbers of shoppers prefer to make their purchases online. Ecommerce shopping is expected to grow by more than 40% to about $500 billion by 2020, according to research firm Forrester. Of course, Amazon is the 800 pound gorilla in online shopping, and in recent years it’s made big inroads in shopping, with easy return policies and services like Prime, which promise to get users deliveries within two days.
  • But even some of the traditional retailers are launching their own eCommerce divisions, which can cut down on sales at bricks and mortar stores. And it turns out they are automating jobs that used to be done by people.
  • There’s an oversupply of malls. And when big anchor tenants–the Macy’s and Sears of the world–don’t do well and decide to leave, there’s a spillover effect, reducing traffic to other retail stores.
  • People appear to be spending their money in different ways–like going out more for dinner more, for vacations, and on the ever-increasing cost of health care, according to a recent report in The Economist.

Is there any good news for the retail sector?

It’s not all gloom and doom however. While ECommerce is certainly a growth opportunity for jobs, U.S. consumers still prefer to shop in stores for most products, according to this report.

The Bureau of Labor Statistics forecasts the number of traditional retail sales jobs to continue growing by 5% through 2024.

Here are a few more details about Stash investors who work in the retail sector:

  • The majority earn less than $25,000 annually.
  • The top three funds they’ve invested in are the Moderate Mix and Blue Chips and Conservative Mix funds.
  • By contrast, the top funds for the average Stash investor are Delicious Dividends, Blue Chips, and Moderate Mix funds.  

Key Takeaways:

Consumer spending fuels the U.S. economy, and the retail sector is one of the biggest employers in the U.S. In recent years, the traditional retail industry has suffered from weaker sales and layoffs as Ecommerce sales have continued to gain ground. U.S. consumers still prefer to shop in stores for most items.

The post What’s Causing the Retail Slump? appeared first on Stash Learn.

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