Reader Mail: Is Hoboken next?
27
June
6/27/2008:
One Hoboken411 reader doesn’t think Hoboken is as immune from bleak economic news as some might think.
“Here’s a good list of store closings. It is just getting started. Hoboken and the NYC Metro area haven’t felt the full effects yet, but they will. The balloon is contracting, and it just takes a while to fall back where it all started…”

Store Closings: Symptoms of A Depressed Economy
- Ann Taylor (NYSE: ANN) closing 117 stores nationwide A company spokeswoman said the company hasn’t revealed which stores will be shuttered. It will let the stores that will close this fiscal year know over the next month.
- Eddie Bauer (NASDAQ: EBHI) to close more stores – Eddie Bauer has already closed 27 shops in the first quarter and plans to close up to two more outlet stores by the end of the year.
- Cache (NASDAQ: CACH) closing stores – Women’s retailer Cache announced that it is closing 20 to 23 stores this year.
- Lane Bryant, Fashion Bug, Catherines closing 150 stores nationwide The owner of retailers Lane Bryant , Fashion Bug, Catherines Plus Sizes will close about 150 underperforming stores this year. The company hasn’t provided a list of specific store closures and can’t say when it will offer that info, spokeswoman Brooke Perry said today.
- Talbots (NYSE:TLB), J. Jill closing stores – About a month ago, Talbots announced that it will be shuttering all 78 of its kids and men’s stores. Now the company says it will close another 22 underperforming stores.
The 22 stores will be a mix of Talbots women’s and J. Jill, another chain it owns. The closures will occur this fiscal year, according to a company press release.
- Gap Inc. (NYSE: GPS) closing 85 stores – In addition to its namesake chain, Gap also owns Old Navy and Banana Republic. The company said the closures – all planned for fiscal 2008 – will be weighted toward the Gap brand.
- Foot Locker (NYSE: FL) to close 140 stores – In the company press release and during its conference call with analysts today, it did not specify where the future store closures – all planned in fiscal 2008 – will be. The company could not be immediately reached for comment
- Wickes is going out of business – Wickes Furniture is going out of business and closing all of its stores, Wickes, a 37-year-old retailer that targets middle-income customers, filed for bankruptcy protection last month.
- Goodbye Levitz – The furniture retailer, which is going out of business. Levitz first announced it was going out of business and closing all 76 of its stores in December. The retailer dates back to 1910 when Richard Levitz opened his first furniture store in Lebanon , PA. In the 1960s, the warehouse/showroom concept brought Levitz to the forefront of the furniture industry.
The local Levitz closures will follow the shutdown of Bombay.
- Zales, Piercing Pagoda closing stores – The owner of Zales and Piercing Pagoda previously said it plans to close 82 stores by July 31. Today, it announc ed that it is closing another 23 underperforming stores. The company said it’s not providing a list of specific store closures. Of the 105 locations planned for closure, 50 are kiosks and 55 are stores.
These are 10 of them, see the other 15 after the jump!!
(Depressed Economy, continued…)
- Disney Store (NYSE:DIS)owner has the right to close 98 stores The Walt Disney Company announced it acquired about 220 Disney Stores from subsidiaries of The Children’s Place Retail Stores. The exact number of stores acquired will depend on negotiations with landlords.
Those subsidiaries of Children’s Place filed for bankruptcy protection in late March. Walt Disney in the news release said it has also obtained the right to close about 98 Disney Stores in the U.S. The press release didn’t list those stores.
- Home Depot (NYSE: HD)store closings – ATLANTA – Nearly 7+ months after its chief executive said there were no plans to cut the number of its core retail stores, The Home Depot Inc. announced Thursday that it is shuttering 15 of them amid a slumping U.S. economy and housing market. The move will affect 1,300 employees.
It is the first time the world’s largest home improvement store chain has ever closed a flagship store for performance reasons. Its shares rose almost 5 percent. The Atlanta-based company said the underperforming U.S.stores being closed represent less than 1 percent of its existing stores. They will be shuttered within the next two months.
- CompUSA clarifies details on store closings Any extended warranties purchased for products through CompUSA will be honored by a third-party provider, Assurant Solutions. Gift cards, rain checks, and rebates purchased prior to December 12 can be redeemed at any time during the final sale. For those w h o h ave a gadget currently in for service with CompUSA, the repair will be completed and the gadget will be returned to owners.
- Macy’s – 9 stores -
- Movie Gallery (OTC: MVGR)- 160 stores as part of reorganization plan to exit bankruptcyThe video rental company plans to close 400 of 3,500 Movie Gallery and Hollywood Video stores in addition to the 520 locations the video rental chain closed last fall.
- Pep Boys (NYSE: PBY) – 33 stores
- Sprint Nextel (NYSE: S) – 125 retail locations New Sprint Nextel CEO Dan Hesse appears to have inherited a company bleeding subscribers by the thousands, and will now officially be dropping the ax on 4,000 employees and 125 retail locations. Amid the loss of 639,000 postpaid customers in the fourth quarter, Sprint will be cutting a total of 6.7% of its work force (following the 5,000 layoffs last year) and 8% of company-owned brick-and-mortar stores, while remaining mute on other rumors that it will consolidate its headquarters in Kansas. Sprint Nextel shares are down $2.89, or nearly 25%, at the time of this writing.
- J. C. Penney (NYSE: JCP), Lowe’s and Office Depot are scaling back
- Ethan Allen Interiors (NYSE: ETH): The company announced plans to close 12 of 300+ stores in an effort to cut costs.
- Wilsons the Leather Experts (NASDAQ: WLSN) – 158 stores
- Pacific Sunwear (NASDAQ: PSUN) will close its 154 Demo stores after a review of strategic alternatives for the urban-apparel brand. Seventy-four underperforming Demo stores closed last May.
- Sharper Image (OTC: SHRPQ): The company recently filed for bankruptcy protection and announced that 90 of its 184 stores are closing. The retailer will still operate 94 stores to pay off debts, but 90 of these stores have performed poorly and also may close.
- Bombay Company (OTC: BBAO): The company unveiled plans to close all 384 U.S.-based Bombay Company stores. The company’s online storefront has discontinued operations.
- KB Toys posted a list of 356 stores that it is closing around the United States as part of its bankruptcy reorganization. To see the list of store closings, go to the KB Toys Information web site, and click on Press Information
- Dillard’s (NYSE: DDS) to Close More Stores Dillard’s Inc. said it will continue to focus on closing underperforming stores, reducing expenses and improving its merchandise in 2008. At the company’s annual shareholder meeting, CEO William Dillard II said the company will close another six underperforming stores this year
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June 27th 2008 - 14:57:09 |
sullyx wrote:
Actually I can have shipments to the office, I just usually choose home for a myriad of reasons. Now that NY taxes shipments, I rarely (IF EVER) ship to work.
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June 27th 2008 - 16:02:47 |
sullyx wrote:
depends. we are ‘discouraged’ from having things sent to our offices because we received an Anthrax letter a few years back, now EVERY piece of mail that comes in the building is opened in the mailroom, tagged as ‘inspected’, then delivered to us. Since time opening boxes = money on mailroom staff they dont want people having all their personal stuff mailed here.
I’ve got a doorman at home so it’s not a big deal.
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June 28th 2008 - 10:43:35 |
My reaction this this: WHO CARES! I have not been in one of those stores listed except to use the men’s room in years. I think I bought a pair of shorts at the GAP in 2001 when I forgot my gym clothes at home. I have no idea why people support these cookie cutter, homogenized, boring places anyway.
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June 28th 2008 - 14:38:44 |
hoboken hammer wrote:
Amazon uses the Postal Service sometimes, and they just leave the box right on the ground in a box that says “AMAZON” and the product name right on it. Needless to say, things get stolen a lot, but at least Amazon is good at shipping another one out right away.
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July 1st 2008 - 11:22:08 |
YuppieSteve wrote:
in any ten year period or in the ten year periods you’ve seen? i am 26 years old, and i would say that my lifetime has pretty much been a bunch of up cycles. there really haven’t been “down times”. there was in the 80s, but the 90s and the 00s have pretty much been economic booms. the tech boom, though partially artificial, carried us into the new millennium, the real estate boom took over from that, so there was really no down period where people really had to cut back on spending.
i think if you look at a bunch of factors over the past 10 years, you see a dramatically different economy right now. last night on the news, the government apparently approved a 47 cent increase on a gallong of milk. not sure if that was NY State or National, i was only half paying attention, but that’s a pretty big increase in the price of a gallon of milk.
the price of a gallon of gas has essentially tripled in the past 10 years, and nearly quadrupled. college tuition goes up on average 4-7% annually.
costs keep going up. also, everyone is saying that people aren’t buying less, they are just buying less at B&M stores. you have to also realize that the circle of people we are all exposed to are more apt to shop online. people near cities are going to do it for convenience and older people in cities adapt quicker than older people outside of city areas.
keep in mind, a good portion of the country still does not have broadband. most older people in more suburban or rural areas are definitely not shopping online. no more than they shopped from catalogs before, so i doubt that’s a contributing factor to the closing of B&M stores.
this is real, stores are closing to cut costs and save money. maybe they will be closing stores in areas where more people shop online, and it makes sense, but either way, that means that people are losing jobs that work at those stores and are going to have to cut back their spending. this all compounds on top of each other. sure, maybe some of them can switch jobs to a different place, but it’s not that easy. sooner or later, this will trickle more and more into hoboken and the city.
notice all those walmart commercials on tv? they know what’s going on with the economy and they know they are the cheapest prices….so they are advertising more. i saw a commercial for clothes at walmart the other day. never saw that before, but now it’s on quite frequently.
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July 2nd 2008 - 10:04:55 |
starbucks to close 600 stores! the sky is falling now. what’s the deal with the ones in hoboken? they all making a profit? did people stop buying coffee, or just finally realize that shitty starbucks coffee isn’t worth those prices?
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July 2nd 2008 - 10:26:58 |
bradykp wrote:
I believe we are getting 1-2 more……….
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July 2nd 2008 - 10:49:07 |
matt_72 wrote:
we are supposed to get one on 3rd and Washington right? but if they are announcing closing stores, there’s nothing to say one of the locations in Hoboken is not in trouble.
I think more likely scenario is to close some of the redundant locations in NYC or more of the locations in rural areas that may not be performing that well. we’ll see though. It will all happen over the next year I think they said.
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July 2nd 2008 - 11:44:51 |
Re 28. Yup, S-buck’s announced a 19% reduction, as per PRI’s MarketPlace, this a.m. The founder has already resumed the helm to navigate a possible turn-around.
Most of the slated closings are for those opened in the last few years. Who knows what that means for Hoboken’s 3.
S-buck’s—who cares? The coffee is bitterly over-roasted & over-priced anyway. Though sorry for the possible lay-off’s of the day-to-day workers.
We need to support our local businesses, like Empire Coffee & Tea.
Stroll Washington Street…commercial space plentiful for rent.
Recession is the reality.
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July 2nd 2008 - 12:04:04 |
Tama Murden wrote:
do you buy your floppy hats from a local floppy hat emporium or from a mega floppy hat store
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