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  #2261  
Old Posted Jul 10, 2011, 3:37 AM
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Walmart has most to fear from Target entry, survey finds

BY SHARON SINGLETON, QMI AGENCY

Walmart, the world’s biggest retailer, may have more to fear from rival Target’s arrival into Canada than some of the country’s homegrown chains, according to a new study.

Most retailers are likely to lose some customers from the arrival of the U.S. giant, which is set to open its stores here next year, the study by Satov Consultants found. But Walmart shoppers showed the least loyalty, with 57% indicating they will shop there less frequently in favour of Target.

Forty-one percent of Sears customers said they were likely to visit Target more, compared with just 37% of those at The Bay, the survey found.

Canadian Tire, Shopper’s Drug Mart and Costco have the most loyal customers amongst mass retailers, with only 19% of current Canadian Tire and Shopper’s customers and 16% of Costco customers planning to become less frequent shoppers because of Target.

Canada’s retail landscape is undergoing major changes, with an invasion of foreign stores planning to open here. The strong economy and relatively underserved market have already attracted Victoria’s Secret and Marshalls, with Nordstrom, Kohl’s and the U.K.’s Topshop among other names due to arrive.

Target, which in January this year bought 220 Zellers locations from HBC for $1.82 billion, is seen as one of the biggest threats to local operators with its cheap, chic product offering.

“Target’s biggest challenge in entering the Canadian market will be to differentiate itself from Walmart by demonstrating its unique value proposition, which values shopping experience and quality over rock-bottom pricing,” says Mark Satov, president and founder of Satov Consultants.

“Target can’t win a pricing war against Walmart.”

...

http://www.torontosun.com/2011/07/08...y-survey-finds
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  #2262  
Old Posted Jul 10, 2011, 4:00 AM
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A changing of the guard at Canadian retailers

MARINA STRAUSS

Canadian retailers are playing a game of musical chairs in their executive ranks as they prepare for a flood of foreign retailers coming to Canada, including the savvy U.S. discounter Target Corp.

On Thursday, Sears Canada Inc. (SCC-T16.93-0.08-0.47%), which has struggled with weak results, appointed a former Loblaw executive to replace Dene Rogers as chief executive officer. Loblaw Cos. Ltd. (L-T38.70-0.05-0.13%), which will get a new president this summer, quickly replaced Calvin McDonald, now the new Sears CEO, with Mark Butler, a veteran of the grocer.

Shoppers Drug Mart Corp. and Tim Hortons Inc. are among other retailers now searching for a new CEO.

“The competitive challenges of the international invasion of Canada ... are creating new retail challenges that are way beyond the traditional scope,” said John Torella, a senior partner in retail consulting firm J.C. Williams Group. “Boards have no patience; they want change and they want it fast. It’s not status quo. It’s a sea change.”

The stakes are high for Canadian incumbents, which in many cases face foreign retailers such as Target that are much bigger than they are, with more resources. They feel the pressure to snap up the best executives before a rival comes in and takes them.

As well, some of the retailers hunting for new executives have been stretched recently in their financial results, including Sears and Shoppers. They’re feeling the pinch of tightening consumer spending as Canadians focus on paying down debt. And the companies are feeling the effects of changes in their segments and rising competition, feeding the sense of urgency to bolster their business before the landscape gets even tougher.

Target is to open its first stores in Canada by 2013, with plans to convert 100 to 150 of them to its own banner within the next two to three years and more than 200 eventually. In January, it sealed a $1.8-million deal with Zellers Inc. to buy up to 220 of its store leases.

Other foreign retailers moving into Canada including lingerie specialist Victoria’s Secret and home improvement chain Lowe’s Cos., while discounter Kohl’s, high-end department store retailer Nordstrom and J. C. Penney are among other chains looking for space here.

“Target is one impressive organization,” said Rick Chad, president of executive recruiter Chad Management, who is helping the U.S. company find personnel. “They’re focused and they have a plan and they’re coming in a big way. It will have an effect on a lot of the players.”

Sears is considered to be one of the retailers that could be hurt most by Target’s entry. “Sears is a train wreck and it’s only going to get worse for them,” said Jeff Doucette, a principal in Calgary-based consulting firm Sales Is Not Simple. “It’s an interesting challenge.”

...

http://www.theglobeandmail.com/globe...rticle2072155/
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  #2263  
Old Posted Jul 10, 2011, 4:30 AM
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Originally Posted by freeweed View Post
I'm with you on almost every single consumer product.. except groceries. Grocery shopping to me is all about service (well, the lack of long lines and at least semi-friendly staff), cleanliness, and quality. I can't even set foot in a Stupidstore. I don't care if it was 50% cheaper, I just can't do it.

But for everything else - yeah. The US rocks.
For me it depends on the products I'm buying. For dry goods and canned goods, and even meat, I prefer No Frills. I also shop at a specialty store to get products I can't get at any supermarket.
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  #2264  
Old Posted Jul 10, 2011, 11:41 AM
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Originally Posted by miketoronto View Post
I have mixed feelings about the Yorkdale expansion.
Yorkdale is starting to get new stores to the region, when before that would only have happened downtown.
This is now putting downtown Toronto at a loss, as Yorkdale snags the new regional stores, and people just go to Yorkdale instead of coming into the city.
The expansion of the Holt Renfrew is also concerning for this same reason.
If Yorkdale keeps expanding like this and the stores inside them start approaching the size of the downtown stores, than it really is going to make lots of people stop going into the city.
The Holt Renfrew downtown will still be double the size of the new store at Yorkdale.
But still, is this a signal of a shift where downtown is losing it's edge? Why have these new stores not located downtown first, instead of Yorkdale?

Yorkdale is really giving the Eaton Centre a run for it's money now, which is concerning.
You're such an alarmist. Downtown is hardly losing its edge. Yorkdale gets their stores first over downtown because it's more difficult to add new stores downtown in the destination areas.
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  #2265  
Old Posted Jul 10, 2011, 11:45 AM
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Originally Posted by whiteford View Post
sure looks like the core in Calgary to me. what are they going to make an exact copy of the core or what? i sure look like an early core render' as was stated.
The glass roof expansion in Yorkdale was completed in 2005. I'm sure it was a reference for The Core expansion in Calgary which is a possible reason The Core looks like a exact copy to you.
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  #2266  
Old Posted Jul 10, 2011, 3:28 PM
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I read in an article about J Crew opening in toronto - its going to be 48,000 sq feet? is that a typo? like 48,000? thats like double the size of most H&M stores! and the J Crew is only carrying womens clothes i could see it being 4000 sq ft - most of the US stores are small, like smaller than the gap

Quote:
U.S. fashion retailer J. Crew announced Friday that it will open its first Canadian store in Toronto in August.

The opening of the more than 48,000-square-foot store in the Yorkdale Shopping Centre will mark the arrival of just the latest in a number of high-profile U.S. retailers either operating in Canada or planning to do so, including the anticipated entry into the Canadian market of discount retailer Target in 2013.
http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/toront...w-toronto.html
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  #2267  
Old Posted Jul 10, 2011, 3:52 PM
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There will be enough chicks in Yorkville, but I mean hit chicks, not big ones.

J Crew will be an awesome chick magnet in Yorkville.
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  #2268  
Old Posted Jul 10, 2011, 11:30 PM
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if you like preppy girls than yes, its a preppy heaven
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  #2269  
Old Posted Jul 10, 2011, 11:46 PM
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Who doesn't like preppy girls?
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  #2270  
Old Posted Jul 11, 2011, 2:35 AM
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Who doesn't like preppy girls?
Wait, how are we defining preppy here? Are we talking something that is defined by the byproducts of prep-schools or are we talking about something else?
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  #2271  
Old Posted Jul 11, 2011, 5:17 AM
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in the high school sense


enjoy-your-style.com

current j crew...

apartmenttherapy.com
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  #2272  
Old Posted Jul 11, 2011, 12:34 PM
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Heathers...great film.
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  #2273  
Old Posted Jul 13, 2011, 10:08 PM
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http://www.blogto.com/fashion_style/...chasse_gardee/

This Week in Fashion: Joe Fresh store openings, Urban Contemporary Africana, Caitlin Power comes to Toronto, hot dogs and heels at Chasse Gardee


Posted by Paul Aguirre / JULY 13, 2011


Quote:
Joe Fresh announces more store openings with first one next week

Build it, and they will come. I'm guessing that's the motto employed by Joe Fresh mastermind Joe Mimran and his team. The (almost) H&M-killing clothing line, once known as "oh yeah, that Loblaws brand" is taking a giant leap forward with the announcement of three new store openings in the GTA throughout the rest of 2011. There's already an outpost in Vancouver (pictured) and another one set to open in Quebec in September, not to mention the much-hyped plans for a store on New York City's Fifth Avenue. The first ribbon cutting goes down next week at the 9,500-square-foot Golden Mile (1880 Eglinton Avenue East). A smaller store is slated to open this fall at Carlton & Church in The Gardens and another big one at Queen W. & Portland, both, I assume, within earshot of new Loblaws locations. As a bonus, each new store will also offer a 20 per cent off all purchases on opening day.
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  #2274  
Old Posted Jul 29, 2011, 3:25 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by drum118 View Post
June 18







Yorkdale Mall Expansion - from drum118 at UT

Construction pictures from last month.
http://urbantoronto.ca/forum/showthr...ure-2s)/page10
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  #2275  
Old Posted Aug 2, 2011, 2:11 AM
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Micky T's

From Little Current, Ont.:


Google Streetview

Wonder if they serve a sandwich called Filet of Fish.
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  #2276  
Old Posted Aug 11, 2011, 11:24 PM
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Two new Apple Stores coming to Ontario....

Conestoga
Waterloo, Ontario

Mapleview Centre
Burlington, Ontario
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  #2277  
Old Posted Aug 12, 2011, 1:23 AM
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J. Crew hopes updated classics fill a niche in Canadian market

Dana Flavelle
Business Reporter

American clothing retailer J. Crew Group, Inc. says it’s banking on its unique assortment of updated classics to overcome the current economic turmoil as it opens its first Canadian store in Toronto’s Yorkdale shopping mall.

“We’re obviously nervous like everyone should be today. So we’re being conservative,” Mickey Drexler, chairman and chief executive officer of the New York-based retailer, said Thursday.

The 5,000 square foot store, which will carry only women’s clothing and accessories, is slated to Aug. 18, the first of as many as 20 Canadian stores, including another five “in the next few years,” he said.

‘We know it’s going to be a reasonably promotional back to school period and holiday season. As always our mission is to offer unique products at fair value,” Drexler said in a telephone interview with the Toronto Star.

“We can’t control the macro-environment,” Drexler added, referring to a week that saw stock markets roil amid concerns high U.S. and European government debt loads could trigger another recession.

“We just have to play it best,” Drexler said, noting J. Crew’s fall lineup will play to its strengths, including bold colours, quirky mixes and matches, woven shirts, perfect and vintage tees, and expanded line of handbags and shoes.

Whether it’s the popular café Capri cropped pant, in wool for fall, for $118, or the classic Italian leather Mona pump, for $198, or the fully lined wool Schoolboy blazer (for women), at $188, Drexler describes J. Crew as catering to customers who want designer quality at less than designer prices. (All figures are in U.S. dollars. Canadian pricing has not been disclosed.)

The Yorkdale store is expected to do well, retail industry experts said. The iconic label, a favourite of U.S. First Lady Michelle Obama, is already well known to Canadians who shop its catalogue, website and U.S. border stores.

‘They should do well at least initially, as the women’s wear market welcomes new stores with open arms if that new retailer comes with a reputation: Michelle Obama – need I say more?” said Ed Strapagiel, executive vice-president at market research firm KubasPrimedia in Toronto.

“Yorkdale mall, however, might present some challenges once they complete their expansion next year. We just don’t know what retailers are going in there,” Strapagiel cautioned.

Indeed, J. Crew is just one of a slew of American and European retailers set to converge on the Canadian market, making it their first stop on the road to international expansion as growth slows at home.

Drexler acknowledged that in the current climate the game will be about winning market share from competitors.

“Whatever we do we take away from someone else. There’s isn’t a lot of growth yet,” he said, noting that’s how Apple Inc. has flourished. The 66-year-old seasoned retailer sits on Apple’s board.

In Canada, J. Crew’s are expected to take a bite out of broad range of competitors, from the Bay to Banana Republic, said Maureen Atkinson, a principal in the retail consulting firm J. C. William Group Inc., of Toronto.

“They’re a bit like Ralph Lauren in that updated classics are really the style. Price point-wise they’d compete with Banana Republic but Banana Republic is a little more trendy in style,” Atkinson said.

A huge J. Crew fan herself, Atkinson said the retailer is almost in a category of its own, particularly in the Canadian market, where most clothing is either so trendy it goes out of style fast or is well made but “dowdy.”

Drexler, who joined J. Crew in 2003 after 18 years with the Gap, where he grew the business from $400 million to $14 billion U.S. a year, has brought some much needed flair to the brand, Atkinson said.

J. Crew plans to open as many as 20 stores across Canada, including five in the next few years, Drexler said. Future locations could include Toronto’s Eaton Centre and Vancouver’s Robson St., he said, though no leases have been signed.

...

http://www.thestar.com/business/comp...anadian-market
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  #2278  
Old Posted Aug 12, 2011, 1:24 AM
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7 For All Mankind opens its first retail store in the Greater Toronto Area

MONTREAL, Aug. 11, 2011 /CNW Telbec/ - 7 For All Mankind, the Los Angeles-based premium denim-lifestyle brand, continues its aggressive retail expansion in Canada with the opening of its first store in the Toronto area at Yorkdale Shopping Centre. This is the second 7 For All Mankind retail store in Canada, following the March 2011 opening of its Chinook Centre store in Calgary. The brand, which currently operates over 150 stores worldwide, will also open a store in Edmonton's West Edmonton Mall in August 2011.

7 For All Mankind already maintains a faithful following in Canada and has been sold through high-end stores such as Holt Renfrew, Harry Rosen and Simons since 2003. Development plans in Canada include opening 10 to 15 stores over the next four years.

In addition to 7 For All Mankind's renowned denim collection, the store will offer the brand's sportswear collection, accessories and children's collection launching this Fall 2011. The children's collection, available in sizes 0 to 14 for girls and 0 to 16 for boys, features the same fits, finishes and fabrications as the men's and women's collections.

...

http://www.newswire.ca/en/releases/a.../11/c3053.html
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  #2279  
Old Posted Aug 12, 2011, 1:39 AM
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Ogilvy's store changes hands again

Selfridges group steps in; New owner says management to stay, plan for a second store to go ahead

By PAUL DELEAN, The Gazette


The landmark Ogilvy department store will join Holt Renfrew as part of the upscale retail portfolio of Selfridges Group Ltd., which is buying the store for an undisclosed sum.
Photograph by: ALLEN MCINNIS THE GAZETTE, The Gazette



MONTREAL - Montreal's historic Ogilvy's department store is changing hands for the second time in just over a year.

Selfridges Group Ltd., the real estate arm of Canada's wealthy Weston family, is the new buyer.

Terms were not disclosed. Selfridges said it will retain current management.

"This store is a great addition to our growing international portfolio," said chief financial officer Paul Gallagher.

"SGL is pleased to have this opportunity to enhance its retail operations in Montreal, which has an international reputation as a leading fashion centre."

Just last year, the upscale Ste. Catherine St. store - founded in 1866 - was purchased by a private investment group comprised of Champlain Financial Corp., BB Real Estate Investment Trust (controlled by the Beaudoin/Bombardier families) and the Quebec Federation of Labour's Fonds immobilier de solidarité.

It bought the building, also for an undisclosed sum rumoured to be about $100 million, from owners that included a Toronto investment firm and the CBC Employee Pension Fund, and announced plans to open a second Ogilvy's location at Quartier Dix30 complex on the South Shore in 2012.

Those plans are still in place, a Selfridges Group spokesperson said Friday.

The downtown store sold previously for a reported $50 million in 2000 and $38,500 in 1927.

...

Read more: http://www.montrealgazette.com/busin...#ixzz1Um5PFerx
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  #2280  
Old Posted Aug 12, 2011, 10:10 PM
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Originally Posted by SpongeG View Post
Marshalls department store announces locations across Canada

By Marc Weisblott | Daily Brew – Wed, 15 Dec 3:29 PM EST

Popular U.S. discount department store Marshalls formally announced its expansion to Canada this week. The move is part of a trend that finds more American retailers moving north in the aftermath of the recession.

Six locations of Marshalls will open in Canada next year, including four planned for the Toronto area, one of which is notable for its conversion from a nightclub that aspired to be the most cutting-edge in the world.

The bankruptcy of Circa, less than three years after opening, provided a prime downtown location for Marshalls owner TJX Companies, which expects to eventually open up to 100 similar stores across the country.

...

http://ca.news.yahoo.com/blogs/daily...ss-canada.html
Found out today Marshalls is coming to Hamilton, they are renovating a closed cinema on Upper James. Winners is across the street haha.
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