The Arizona Republic

JCPenney to close up to 140 stores, offer buyouts

Struggling department store industry continues aggressive cost-cutting moves as consumers find other places to shop

- Nathan Bomey @NathanBome­y USA TODAY

JCPenney plans to close 130 to 140 stores and offer buyouts to 6,000 workers as the department-store industry sags in competitio­n with online sellers and nimble niche retailers.

The company said Friday that it would shutter 13% to 14% of its locations and introduce new goods and services aimed at the shifting preference­s of its customer base.

The cuts come amid mounting challenges for once-stalwart department store chains such as Macy’s and Sears, which are also aggressive­ly closing stores to shed costs as shoppers flock to alternativ­es.

Macy’s recently announced plans to cut 100 of its 675 fullline stores. Sears said it plans to close 150 stores, including 108 Kmart locations, leaving it with more than 1,300.

“It became apparent to us that our footprint was too large,” Penney CEO Marvin Ellison told investors Friday, and the closures will “allow us to raise the overall brand standard of JCPenney” and invest in remaining stores.

A list of Penney stores to close will be released in midMarch. Liquidatio­n sales are expected to take place by the second quarter.

The closures mark a departure from Penney’s relatively steady store count over the last 15 years. The company had 1,021 stores as of Jan. 30, 2016, according to corporate documents, down from a high of 1,108 in 2009.

“This is just a market correction,’’ Farla Efros, president of HRC Retail Advisory, said in an interview. “There were too many stores and too many retailers and too much noise in the market.’’

Online competitio­n, fast-fashion retailers such as H&M and Forever 21 and discounter­s such as T.J. Maxx have undermined Penney’s business. Ellison said the company is responding by overhaulin­g its products.

Penney is adding toys, beauty products, appliances and home goods as it tries to appeal to the customer base. Some 70% of the base is composed of women. And 70% of all customers own their home.

The appliances push, paired with the introducti­on of new home installati­on services, is targeted at swiping business from ailing competitor Sears.

The retailer is also reducing its emphasis on women’s apparel previously geared toward business outfits and formal wear. Instead, the company is adding athletic and leisure wear, widening the availabili­ty of Nike and Adidas items and introducin­g more plus-size clothes. And the company will shift all of its women’s shoe department­s toward “open-sell” environmen­ts, reducing the need for sales workers to have to hunt through back rooms to find them the right pair.

Ellison told investors the company would “pivot our retail strategy toward nonapparel.”

That includes a plan to “significan­tly expand” toy sales after encouragin­g results from toy sales in a limited number of stores during the holiday season, Ellison said.

Despite the moves, Penney’s projected sales at stores open at least a year would be relatively stagnant overall — from a 1% decline to a 1% increase.

That projection “reduces conviction” in the company’s long-term strategy after a previous projection of 3% annual growth through 2019, UBS analyst Michael Binetti said in a note to investors.

Penney expects to save $200 million in annual costs in connection with the store-closure plan, including the shuttering of two distributi­on centers. It will record an initial pretax charge of $225 million to cover the initial closure costs.

In a related move, the retailer said it would offer a “voluntary early retirement program” to about 6,000 workers, including corporate, store and supply chain workers. Ellison said many workers affected by store closures would be hired to fill jobs vacated by employees who accept buyouts.

The company’s stock closed down almost 6% Friday to $6.46.

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