The Niagara Falls Review

Amazon said to consider buying some Toys ‘R’ Us stores to boost footprint

- MATT TOWNSEND, LAUREN COLEMAN-LOCHNER AND SPENCER SOPER

Amazon.com has looked at the possibilit­y of expanding its retail footprint by acquiring some locations from bankrupt Toys “R” Us Inc., according to people with knowledge of the situation.

The online giant isn’t interested in maintainin­g the Toys “R” Us brand, but has considered using the soon-to-be-vacant spaces for its own purposes, said the people, who asked not to be identified because the talks are private.

Such a move would let Amazon quickly expand its brick-and-mortar presence, coming on the heels of buying Whole Foods Market and its more than 450 locations last year.

The Seattle-based company also has opened its own line of bookstores and a convenienc­e-store concept.

Representa­tives for Amazon and Toys “R” Us declined to comment.

Additional stores would give Amazon space to showcase its popular Echo line of devices, which run on the Alexa voice-activated platform.

Amazon sees voice as the next interface for people to access technology — supplantin­g computer mouses and touch screens — and the benefits may be easier to demonstrat­e in a real-world setting.

A bigger network of stores would put inventory closer to where shoppers live, potentiall­y enabling quick delivery to e-commerce customers. The space could also serve as a staging ground for grocery delivery from Whole Foods stores.

Amazon is already planning to roll out a free two-hour service to Whole Foods customers in four cities, including Dallas and Cincinnati.

Still, the company is under little pressure to hammer out a deal and deliberati­ons may lead nowhere.

In 2015, Amazon held discussion­s about acquiring some RadioShack locations around the time of the electronic­s retailer’s bankruptcy filing, people familiar with the matter said. Nothing came of those talks.

Toys “R” Us, meanwhile, may live on in some form. The company, which filed for bankruptcy in September, announced plans to shut down its U.S. operations last week.

But its Canadian unit is up for sale, along with its operations around the world. The division in the U.K. is being wound down.

Toys “R” Us has been holding out hope that an entity will buy the Canadian unit, which was in better shape financiall­y than the U.S. business.

A buyer could potentiall­y still operate some U.S. stores from a Canadian base. The company has begun liquidatin­g its more than 700 U.S. locations, but is holding off at its 200 best stores for the next few weeks.

An investment group led by Isaac Larian, the founder of toymaker MGA Entertainm­ent Inc., has submitted a bid to acquire the Canadian business.

Larian has said that his group is also doing due diligence on the U.S. stores, and hopes to keep some of them open.

 ?? CHRISTOPHE­R LEE BLOOMBERG ?? A pedestrian passes in front of a Toys “R” Us Express store in New York.
CHRISTOPHE­R LEE BLOOMBERG A pedestrian passes in front of a Toys “R” Us Express store in New York.

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