ECON 99 Cents Only to close all 371 stores and wind down its business


99 Cents Only to close all 371 stores and wind down its business​


99 Cents Only Stores will close all 371 of its stores and wind down its business operations after more than four decades, the City of Commerce discount chain announced Thursday.

“This was an extremely difficult decision and is not the outcome we expected or hoped to achieve,” interim Chief Executive Mike Simoncic said in a statement. “Unfortunately, the last several years have presented significant and lasting challenges in the retail environment.”

He cited multiple factors, including the “unprecedented impact” of the COVID-19 pandemic, shifting consumer demand, persistent inflationary pressures and rising levels of shrink — an industry term that refers to loss of inventory attributed to reasons such as shoplifting, employee theft and administrative errors.


Combined, those issues “have greatly hindered the company’s ability to operate,” Simoncic said.

99 Cents Only has stores in California, Arizona, Nevada and Texas and has about 14,000 employees. The privately held company said it had reached an agreement with Hilco Global to liquidate all of its merchandise and dispose of fixtures, furnishings and equipment at its stores. Sales are expected to begin Friday.

Hilco Real Estate is managing the sale of the company’s real estate assets, which are owned or leased.


Business

99 Cents Only may turn into 99 cents mostly

Sept. 5, 2008
The announcement by 99 Cents Only reflects a larger weakness in the dollar-store category, said Brad Thomas, equity research analyst at KeyBanc Capital Markets.

Dollar Tree, a Chesapeake, Va.-based retailer, announced last month that it was closing 600 of its Family Dollar stores this year and an additional 370 in the next few years, he noted.

“It’s been trying times for many, many retailers,” he said. “What’s interesting is that what started out as a boon to retailers in the pandemic, with all those stimulus checks, quickly turned into a very troublesome time.”


Rising wages, inflation and higher losses due to shrinkage have reduced profits for retailers in a deep-discount sector where margins are already extremely low.

99 Cents Only, with its large base of California stores, has been under particular wage pressure, he said. And it’s at a disadvantage compared with larger chains such as market leader Dollar General, which has a store count close to 20,000 — “a sales base and a store base that is multiple times larger than 99 Cents,” Thomas said.

Last week, Bloomberg reported that 99 Cents Only was considering a bankruptcy filing as it contended with a liquidity shortfall.

Founded in Los Angeles in 1982 by David Gold, 99 Cents Only pioneered the single-price retail concept. At the time, dollar stores were seen as dumping grounds for undesirable products, but the Gold family made the stores bright and well-organized, with good-quality merchandise including groceries and household supplies.

For years, it remained one of the few true “dollar” stores, with items priced at 99 cents or less or grouped to sell for a total of 99 cents.

That changed in 2008 when, faced with fast-rising inflation, soaring food and fuel prices, and a higher minimum wage, 99 Cents Only announced that it was straying from its long-standing price strategy.

Three years later, the company announced that it had agreed to be sold in a deal valued at about $1.6 billion, as investors eyed dollar stores that had grown in popularity during the Great Recession.

Today, with stores scattered around Los Angeles County — among them in Hollywood, Silver Lake, Mid-Wilshire, Santa Monica, Thai Town, North Hollywood and Glendale — the closure of 99 Cents Only will leave a number of large vacant properties in prime locations.

Other major retailers have also announced store closures in the region lately, including REI in Santa Monica, Macy’s in Simi Valley and several Rite Aid locations.

99 Cents Only did not immediately return a request for comment Thursday afternoon.
 

summerthyme

Administrator
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Bad sign when the dollar stores are too rich for people's blood....
Nah... it just became impossible for the companies to source adequate merchandise to sell for a buck.

I remember buying quality glass canisters, multipacks of quality (like Libby used to be) glassware, decent (usable for household use) tools, decent dishtowels, potholders, etc for a buck. Heck, I used to shop the Canadian dollar stores (which, due to the exchange rate, we called the "everything for 63 cents store"!) and got boxes of regular and widemouth
Bernardin brand canning lids.

Now, even at the $1.25 stores, the selection gets thinner and the quality crappier. They either have to raise their prices, or go out of business.

Summerthyme
 

nomifyle

TB Fanatic
I shopped at the 99 cent store in San Antonio back in '08 when I was staying with my brother. It irked me that they rang up 1.00 instead of .99 cents.

With all that is going on in the world I can see why they are closing. And good riddance to Family Dollar, they were always crap.
 

Illini Warrior

Illini Warrior
only a start - more to follow >>> if Biden continues or/and if Trump can't begin the economic swing almost immediately - won't just be some regional dollar store chain going down ....

the Biden lawlessness part of this current disaster period of time gets a partial mention >>> when you barely can manage a surviving profit $$$ and you got minute to minute constant thievery - it eats into that marginal reason to try to stay alive >>> that SW US locale must be under intense Biden illegal's attack at the retail level ....
 

Vegas321

Live free and survive
Another reason could be the California locations have to pay a employee, a full day of take in. Just to pay their wage.
 
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