HomeDiagramsDatabaseMapsForum About
     

Go Back   SkyscraperPage Forum > Regional Sections > Canada > Ontario > Ottawa-Gatineau > Business, Politics & the Economy


Reply

 
Thread Tools Display Modes
     
     
  #3101  
Old Posted Mar 3, 2023, 1:36 PM
OTSkyline OTSkyline is offline
Registered User
 
Join Date: Jun 2012
Posts: 2,789
Yes sad but I don't think I'm necessarily surprised. I've browsed many times but can't recall ever buying anything. Comforting to hear its all Canadian stores though and not just Ottawa - filling that space will be a challenge for every mall across the country.

The world of retail continues to be extremely polarizing. People are either looking for cheap fast fashion or luxury goods - that middle is disappearing fast.
Reply With Quote
     
     
  #3102  
Old Posted Mar 3, 2023, 3:22 PM
Acajack's Avatar
Acajack Acajack is offline
Gros Méchant Loup
 
Join Date: Aug 2006
Location: Province 2, Canadian Empire
Posts: 72,949
Quote:
Originally Posted by OTSkyline View Post
- filling that space will be a challenge for every mall across the country.
t.
Split it up I guess. There are almost no single retailers left that would be looking for that large a footprint just for them.
__________________
Loin des yeux, loin du coeur.
Reply With Quote
     
     
  #3103  
Old Posted Mar 3, 2023, 3:31 PM
OTSkyline OTSkyline is offline
Registered User
 
Join Date: Jun 2012
Posts: 2,789
In the case of the Rideau Centre it might be tough given it's tucked location in the corner and 2 stories.
Reply With Quote
     
     
  #3104  
Old Posted Mar 3, 2023, 3:57 PM
rocketphish's Avatar
rocketphish rocketphish is offline
Planet Ottawa and beyond
 
Join Date: Feb 2009
Location: Greater Ottawa
Posts: 14,200
Quote:
Originally Posted by OTSkyline View Post
The world of retail continues to be extremely polarizing. People are either looking for cheap fast fashion or luxury goods - that middle is disappearing fast.
I've always considered Nordstrom to be near the top of the scale, for Ottawa anyway. Whenever I've been in there (admittedly very few times) the prices seemed ridiculously high. I'm surprised they managed to last this long here. I thought that they would fare better in Toronto and Vancouver though.
Reply With Quote
     
     
  #3105  
Old Posted Mar 3, 2023, 4:24 PM
ars ars is offline
Registered User
 
Join Date: Feb 2013
Location: Ottawa
Posts: 473
It's unfortunate because Nordstrom carried a lot of items and brands that you can't find elsewhere. We weren't prolific Nordstrom shoppers, but we have spent quite a bit of money there over the years.

And it was just a nice store to visit and browse through.

The retail landscape in Canada is looking quite bleak.
Reply With Quote
     
     
  #3106  
Old Posted Mar 3, 2023, 8:36 PM
Truenorth00 Truenorth00 is offline
Registered User
 
Join Date: May 2017
Posts: 28,370
Quote:
Originally Posted by ars View Post
The retail landscape in Canada is looking quite bleak.
This is a country that can't support multiple brands of frozen pizza. I'm surprised we've not seen more high end retail leaving.

A lot of our "wealthy" are turning out to be overleveraged people living off debt. As that cheap capital comes to an end, the retail landscape will have to change too. They won't have the same amount of people living large off their HELOCs anymore.
Reply With Quote
     
     
  #3107  
Old Posted Mar 3, 2023, 8:38 PM
JHikka's Avatar
JHikka JHikka is offline
ハルウララ
 
Join Date: Jul 2009
Location: Toronto
Posts: 12,853
Quote:
Originally Posted by ars View Post
The retail landscape in Canada is looking quite bleak.
I'm not too worried to see oversized department stores selling $300 t-shirts going out of business. I think we'll survive.
Reply With Quote
     
     
  #3108  
Old Posted Mar 3, 2023, 9:06 PM
phil235's Avatar
phil235 phil235 is online now
Registered User
 
Join Date: Sep 2006
Location: Ottawa
Posts: 4,410
I really liked the restaurant.
Reply With Quote
     
     
  #3109  
Old Posted Mar 3, 2023, 9:22 PM
Acajack's Avatar
Acajack Acajack is offline
Gros Méchant Loup
 
Join Date: Aug 2006
Location: Province 2, Canadian Empire
Posts: 72,949
That space might be able to host a "Time Out" style food fair-market type of set-up, though there is already the Queen St. Fare in the CBD. (Rideau would arguably be a better location.)
__________________
Loin des yeux, loin du coeur.
Reply With Quote
     
     
  #3110  
Old Posted Mar 3, 2023, 9:28 PM
rocketphish's Avatar
rocketphish rocketphish is offline
Planet Ottawa and beyond
 
Join Date: Feb 2009
Location: Greater Ottawa
Posts: 14,200
Quote:
Originally Posted by Acajack View Post
That space might be able to host a "Time Out" style food fair-market type of set-up, though there is already the Queen St. Fare in the CBD. (Rideau would arguably be a better location.)
Maybe the NCC could setup The World's Not-So-Longest Skating rink in there next winter?
Reply With Quote
     
     
  #3111  
Old Posted Mar 3, 2023, 9:41 PM
phil235's Avatar
phil235 phil235 is online now
Registered User
 
Join Date: Sep 2006
Location: Ottawa
Posts: 4,410
Quote:
Originally Posted by Acajack View Post
That space might be able to host a "Time Out" style food fair-market type of set-up, though there is already the Queen St. Fare in the CBD. (Rideau would arguably be a better location.)
This would definitely be a good spot for a Time Out Market (though not sure if Time Out would come to Ottawa). QSF has been a pretty big success and already seems over capacity a lot of the time. Would kill the recently reno'd food court below though, which arguably would be a harder spot to fill.

The cost would likely be huge, but maybe a mid-sized concert venue?
Reply With Quote
     
     
  #3112  
Old Posted Mar 3, 2023, 10:18 PM
kwoldtimer kwoldtimer is offline
Registered User
 
Join Date: Jan 2008
Location: La vraie capitale
Posts: 25,992
Quote:
Originally Posted by Acajack View Post
That space might be able to host a "Time Out" style food fair-market type of set-up, though there is already the Queen St. Fare in the CBD. (Rideau would arguably be a better location.)
If it weren't for the location, I'd see the Aberdeen Pavillion as a terrific Time Out. The Nordstrom space could be reconfigured for retailers more geared to the Ottawa market - maybe Giant Tiger could expand from it's Market location. JYSK might work, maybe a Winners ....

They could always just demolish the store and redevelop the site.
Reply With Quote
     
     
  #3113  
Old Posted Mar 3, 2023, 10:20 PM
rocketphish's Avatar
rocketphish rocketphish is offline
Planet Ottawa and beyond
 
Join Date: Feb 2009
Location: Greater Ottawa
Posts: 14,200
High-end department store Nordstorm departing Canada, leaving anchor space in Rideau Centre vacant
The company's departure from Canada is not unexpected, Ottawa retail analyst Barry Nabatian says.

Joanne Laucius, Ottawa Citizen
Published Mar 03, 2023 • Last updated 36 minutes ago • 4 minute read




Nordstrom is closing its six Canadian stores and seven discount Nordstrom Rack locations, including its Rideau Centre location and a Nordstrom Rack at Ottawa Trainyards.

The Seattle-based luxury retailer, which entered Canada in 2014, has announced that the Canadian stores would be closed by the end of June and it will be cutting 2,500 jobs.

Fourth-quarter results showed net earnings of $119 million U.S. for the period ending Jan. 28 compared to $200 million for the previous year. “Despite our best efforts, we do not see a realistic path to profitability for the Canadian business,” CEO Erik Nordstrom said in a statement.

The company’s departure from Canada is not unexpected, said Ottawa retail analyst Barry Nabatian, director of market research at Shore-Tanner & Associates.

“Nordstrom is very high-end. The prices are extremely high. How many people are willing to pay $1,200 for a pair of women’s shoes? After $500, there’s a lot of resistance (to purchase) in general.”

Nordstrom opened its first Canadian store in Calgary in 2014, followed by the Ottawa store, which occupied the second and third levels of a former Sears location. The Rideau Centre store has an alterations and tailoring shop and an energy drinks bar. Merchandise ranged from brand name to designer apparel, housewares, furnishings and beauty products. Nordstrom offered Geox shoes as well as Gucci, Adidas and Adidas by Stella McCarney.

The departure from Canada is not a particular reflection of Ottawa’s notoriously frugal shopping culture, but the capital’s retail ecosystem has had few long-lived luxury retail survivors. Bretton’s department store left the Rideau Centre after a few years in the mid-1980s. Holt Renfrew, which hung on for 78 years, left Ottawa in 2014.

About 15 per cent of Ottawa households earn more than $200,000 a year and the city has a typically stable economy, which might appear to make it a place to sell pricey goods. For high-end retailers, losing 10 to 15 per cent of sales can be a significant hit, Nabatian said.

Ottawa started attracting high-end stores about a decade ago. The Rideau Centre, for example, attracted Tiffany & Co, Michael Kors, Kate Spade and Anthropogie. But the influx of high-end retailers only lasted until about five years ago because Ottawa incomes were not going up, Nabatian said.

Ottawa residents have been feeling the pinch of the declining value of investments, while the cost of necessities has increased. There are a lot of people in the middle-income range in the capital — about half of Ottawa’s 410,000 households earn over $75,000 — but there are not a lot of rich people, he said.

Even higher-end grocery stores have been affected. Nabatian notes that Whole Foods still has only one Ottawa location. “You can’t stop buying food, but you can buy less expensive items.”

One of the few department store success stories of recent years has been the expansion of the Montreal-based Simons, known for its curated lines of merchandise and playful retail spaces. Simons is the second anchor at the Rideau Centre and there is another Simons in Gatineau. Both are doing well, Nabatian said, but he points out that Simons is also a step down from Nordstrom.

The departure of Nordstrom will leave anchor space in the Rideau Centre. Landlord Cadillac Fairview will be looking for a high-end tenant, someone more ambitious than Simons, but not as high-end as Nordstrom, likely from the United States or Europe, Nabatian predicted. It’s possible the Nordstrom space may be carved up into smaller spaces, which was what happened when Sears left the Rideau Centre.

Nabatian predicts Ottawa shoppers will have second thoughts about spending for the next year or two. A recession is almost certainly on the way and that could lead to the closures of other stores selling luxury goods.

“The expectation is that there will be a recession no later than May, and it will be difficult to get new tenants. I don’t think it will last longer than six months, but it will be a year and a half to two years before luxury is back,” Nabatian said.

Meanwhile, the range of high-end candidates for anchor space is slim. Neiman Marcus is laying off about five per cent of its U.S. workforce, but the chic French department store chain Printemps, which has announced plans to open its first U.S. store in New York in 2024, has looked around Ottawa, Nabatian said.

Bargains may be on the way. For now, Nordstrom Canada stores will continue to operate, but Nordstrom Canada intends to hold a liquidation sale, subject to court approval, later in March.

Nordstrom said returns and exchanges would be permitted until March 17, after which all sales and returns will be considered final. Customers are no longer able to shop online at Nordstrom.ca. Orders placed through Nordstrom.ca before March 2 will continue to be fulfilled by Nordstrom Canada.

With files from The Canadian Press

https://ottawacitizen.com/news/local...-centre-vacant
Reply With Quote
     
     
  #3114  
Old Posted Mar 3, 2023, 10:31 PM
citydwlr citydwlr is offline
Registered User
 
Join Date: Mar 2013
Posts: 732
Rec Room could be a possibility for the second floor space. I've seen one within a mall context (Square One Mall, Mississauga) and it looked pretty good.

I could see the 1st floor of that space being split up as others have mentioned.

Something out of left-field could be an Eataly, but I doubt that would work here in Ottawa, sadly.
Reply With Quote
     
     
  #3115  
Old Posted Mar 3, 2023, 10:32 PM
rocketphish's Avatar
rocketphish rocketphish is offline
Planet Ottawa and beyond
 
Join Date: Feb 2009
Location: Greater Ottawa
Posts: 14,200
I'm sorry, Nordstrom. I couldn't afford you.

Bruce Deachman, Ottawa Citizen
Published Mar 03, 2023 • Last updated 13 minutes ago • 3 minute read




I suppose I bear some responsibility for Nordstrom’s pending closure.

I’d been to the Rideau Centre location a number of times. I’ve gone in search of new sunglasses, shirts, pants and shoes, but never quite managed to buy anything. There was always one reason or another to put it off: Sometimes it was too expensive. Other times I couldn’t afford it. And then there were the too-frequent trips where I’d look at the price tag and my mind would immediately conjure up Eddie Murphy’s Axel Foley in Beverly Hills Cop reacting to the price of art in an upscale Los Angeles gallery when he shrieks out: “Get the f— outta here!”

At any rate, those were my three chief excuses for leaving empty-handed: money, cost and expense.

I feel bad for those most affected by the announcement: their staff. Back in 2017, I wrote about shoe shine specialist Jimmy Lam, a personable and motivated young man hoping to revive a lost art. On his first day on the job, he told me, he got to restore a dirty shoe and bring it back to life. “That just got my sparks up,” he said. You couldn’t not like Jimmy. I hope he and all of the company’s Canadian employees find even greater callings wherever they go.

You can probably cite numerous reasons behind Nordstrom’s closure and find at least a grain of sand’s truth in each. Those might include:

• The pandemic has us all working from home in pyjamas. Who needs a pair of Vince Camuto leopard-print booties when you’re in Zoom meetings from the waist up?

• The COVID-led exodus of workers from the downtown core and the convoy occupation of the area really hurt the Rideau Centre in particular. The mall, you may recall, actually closed during much of the convoy, forcing the anti-vaxxers to wear F—- Trudeau flags as capes, rather than much more styling Fleurette wool peacoats.

• The heyday of malls and brick-and-mortar stores was already a thing of the past. COVID only hastened the inevitable switch to online shopping.

But it can’t just be those reasons, can it? I can’t speak authoritatively about Nordstrom closing elsewhere in Canada, but I felt the store never really belonged in Ottawa. It was like one of those tropical birds accidentally blown off course and deposited here, to be gawked at briefly by Sens-hoodied residents, surviving only as long as an unforgiving climate and the few crumbs thrown its way would allow.

When I lived in Montreal, people there told me that Montrealers dressed better to go to work than Ottawans did to go out, and I admit it was a difficult point to argue. In 2011, MSN Travel ranked Ottawa as the eighth-worst-dressed city in the world, worse, even, than Pittsburgh and Jersey Shore. “As a city populated by suit-and-tie civil servants,” the fashion review observed of Ottawa, “there is zero audacity to be different and nary a fashion effort is made. Everyone looks like they’re frozen in the 1980s.”

Maybe so, but, when those vintage ’80s styles are back in vogue, who’s going to be on all the magazine covers? That’s right, Ottawa, we are.

Until then, remember how excited everyone got when the colossal Canadian Tire opened at Carlingwood? That’s more our jam. When we want to wear something colourful, we eat a hotdog with mustard.

There’s a reason that you barely need your car to get to your nearest Mark’s clothing store, as plebeian an outfitter as you’ll find. Perhaps Nordstrom would have had a better chance in Ottawa if it spelled its name with umlauts (Nördström) and came with Allen keys.

I don’t know if Jimmy Lam is still with Nordstrom, but perhaps his words from six years ago could stand in as a fitting epitaph for the department store: “It’s not about the shoe shine, I believe; it’s about how you present yourself.”

Good luck, Jimmy.

https://ottawacitizen.com/news/local...dnt-afford-you
Reply With Quote
     
     
  #3116  
Old Posted Mar 3, 2023, 10:42 PM
rocketphish's Avatar
rocketphish rocketphish is offline
Planet Ottawa and beyond
 
Join Date: Feb 2009
Location: Greater Ottawa
Posts: 14,200
Mall landlords likely to get ‘creative’ to fill Nordstrom vacancies: experts

The Canadian Press
March 3, 2023 | 1:13 PM ET


Nordstrom’s departure from Canada’s retail landscape will leave significant holes in shopping malls, and some analysts say landlords will need to get creative to fill the space.

If malls want to find similar tenants to Nordstrom, they might look to department store rivals Hudson’s Bay, Simons or Saks Fifth Avenue, said Tamara Szames, executive director and industry adviser of Canadian retail at the NPD Group research firm.

But with such companies heavily engaged in the apparel business — the only industry NPD Group tracks that has yet to recover from the COVID-19 pandemic — she thinks it’s more likely that Nordstrom’s landlords will think outside the box to fill the Seattle department store’s spaces.

“Consumers are going back into stores and we’ve seen they’re really looking for an entertainment experience (along with) shopping, so being creative with the leases and rentals of these properties is something that mall owners will have to look at,” she said.

She pointed to pop-ups, food properties and experience-based spaces like the World of Barbie — an interactive, ticketed version of Barbie’s Dreamhouse at the Square One Shopping Centre in Mississauga, Ont., as potential Nordstrom replacements.

Kate Camenzuli, vice-president of retail at real estate firm CBRE, echoed those sentiments.

“The world is our oyster,” she said. “These (landlords) travel globally, to see everything that’s available, and so it may be something that we haven’t even seen yet in the Canadian market, and that might not be a department store. It may not even be a food hall.”

Nordstrom’s largest Canadian landlord, Cadillac Fairview, has yet to outline specific plans for the departing chain’s spaces, which are often anchor tenants at its malls.

Nordstrom’s six Canadian stores — CF Chinook Centre in Calgary, CF Rideau Centre in Ottawa, CF Pacific Centre in Vancouver and CF Eaton Centre, Yorkdale Shopping Centre and CF Sherway Gardens in Toronto — have between seven and 10 years remaining on their leases.

Nordstrom Rack, which promised luxury brands at bargain prices, has seven Canadian stores with between five and eight years left on their leases.

Nordstrom intends to shutter both chains’ Canadian locations by June, leaving its 2,500 Canadian staff unemployed and hundreds of thousands of space to fill.

The CF Eaton Centre location alone took over 220,000 square feet over three levels, when it opened in 2018.

Camenzuli expects Nordstrom’s landlords to look at each space individually and assess what sort of vibe they’re looking to curate at the property.

For some, that could lead to Nordstrom being replaced by another large format retailer or an international brand looking to expand or break into Canada.

In other instances, it will mean the hulking spaces Nordstrom occupies will be broken into smaller stores that can be leased to a wider range of tenants not needing as much space.

Any company looking to expand will find what they’re offering attractive, said Camenzuli, because Nordstrom had prime properties in high-traffic areas.

Even if Nordstrom’s landlords were caught off guard by the chain’s departure, she said most large real estate companies always have plans for who they want to attract should their tenants depart.

“As much as it’s sad to see a Nordstrom player leave, it gives us an opportunity to do things that haven’t been done before,” she said.

“And all of those teams that now have these opportunities have probably like had all these things in their back pocket that they’ve been thinking about for months.”

https://obj.ca/nordstrom-closing-all...ing-2500-jobs/
Reply With Quote
     
     
  #3117  
Old Posted Mar 4, 2023, 12:30 AM
eltodesukane eltodesukane is offline
Registered User
 
Join Date: Dec 2011
Posts: 1,131
Strange how rich 1st world american Canada has been sleepily going along for ~70 years
while supposedly lesser countries like Japan, South Korea, China, Spain, Denmark, Norway, Sweden, ... and even Vietnam are moving up with great energy.
Just look at the subway maps of Barcelona, Seoul, Tokyo...
Years ago, many of those were in worse shape than Canada, not so much today.
Reply With Quote
     
     
  #3118  
Old Posted Mar 4, 2023, 2:52 AM
acottawa acottawa is offline
Registered User
 
Join Date: Aug 2009
Posts: 18,636
Quote:
Originally Posted by eltodesukane View Post
Strange how rich 1st world american Canada has been sleepily going along for ~70 years
while supposedly lesser countries like Japan, South Korea, China, Spain, Denmark, Norway, Sweden, ... and even Vietnam are moving up with great energy.
Just look at the subway maps of Barcelona, Seoul, Tokyo...
Years ago, many of those were in worse shape than Canada, not so much today.
There were zero subways in Canada 70 years ago, so I am not sure what golden age you are harkening back to.
Reply With Quote
     
     
  #3119  
Old Posted Mar 4, 2023, 5:17 PM
Truenorth00 Truenorth00 is offline
Registered User
 
Join Date: May 2017
Posts: 28,370
I'd like to see an Eataly and an Update replace Nordstrom.
Reply With Quote
     
     
  #3120  
Old Posted Mar 4, 2023, 5:26 PM
rocketphish's Avatar
rocketphish rocketphish is offline
Planet Ottawa and beyond
 
Join Date: Feb 2009
Location: Greater Ottawa
Posts: 14,200
Nordstrom followed a familiar path to failure: too big, too fast — and not Canadian enough
Chain launched in Canada in 2014 but will soon close all 13 locations

Pete Evans · CBC News
Posted: Mar 03, 2023 3:58 PM EST | Last Updated: March 3


Nordstrom's decision to close all its stores in Canada and seek protection from its creditors is just the latest example of a U.S. retailer setting up shop to much fanfare, only to have it all fizzle out.

Less than a decade after launching in Canada, the U.S. chain announced Thursday it will shutter all 13 of its department stores across the country in the coming weeks as it puts its focus on its domestic operations and jettisons a Canadian division that has never managed to eke out a profit.

Court filings show that in 2022, Nordstrom's Canadian division sold about $515 million Cdn worth of goods. But it lost $72 million while doing so.

The news came as a surprise for many shoppers and employees, but it wasn't a shock for Liza Amlani, principal and founder of the Retail Strategy Group, because she saw it coming.

"When Nordstrom came into Canada, they scaled way too quickly," she told CBC News in an interview. The chain launched in multiple cities, and then brought its discount offering Nordstrom Rack to the marketplace too, before the parent stores had even found their footing.

"The challenge with scaling too quickly is that it's very difficult to understand truly what that customer wants," she said. "Because a customer in Alberta is very different from a customer in Toronto, who is very different from a customer in Vancouver."

Amlani says many American retailers make the classic mistake of assuming that whatever they do in the U.S. will work just as well in Canada — and they often pay the price.

Perhaps the most well known example of that phenomenon in action was Target, which launched in Canada to much fanfare in 2013, only to shutter all 133 locations barely two years later.

Canadians who travel to the U.S. were very familiar with the chain, so she says when its offerings in Canada ended up being a strange mix of higher-than-expected prices and a lot of empty shelves, Canadians rejected it.

Nordstrom fared a little better, but Amlani says in retrospect the chain should have simply opened two stores, perhaps one each in Vancouver and Toronto, while it learned about the market. "Then they would have really been able to build something," she said.

While the chain made many mistakes along the way, retail consultant Bruce Winder says the main one was that Nordstrom simply misjudged the opportunity presented by the Canadian market.

"They probably just overestimated how rich we are and how much we spend on luxury goods," he said in an interview. "We just don't have as many people who would desire that kind of merchandise they needed to break even."

The pandemic has brought about major upheaval in the retail sector in general, but department stores face even more challenges than most because they are under siege from all sides, Winder says.

Discount stores are eating away their value-oriented customer base from below, while luxury brands are increasingly going direct to consumers instead of through retail channels. And they're often saddled with legacy costs like rent and store maintenance for their huge storefronts, which makes it hard to pivot on the fly.

"I think the department store is on its last legs," Winder says. "The business has been under fire through everyone from J.C. Penney to Macy's and in Canada ... Sears, Eaton's closing years ago, and the Bay is starting to wind down stores carefully too."

"The department store is probably at the last leg of its life cycle."

That may well be the case, but the chain isn't pulling its department store model everywhere. The news of the Canadian closures came as the U.S. parent revealed quarterly earnings this week, numbers that showed the chain took in more than $4 billion US in revenue over the busy holiday shopping period, and booked a profit of $119 million.

Those figures topped expectations, but the company has faced pressure from activist investors seeking to reverse a two-year slide in the company's stock price, which is why Winder speculates that the chain basically gave up in Canada to focus on problems at home.

"What companies do normally when they're under siege like this, is they start to jettison any assets they can," Winder said. "Like a ship that's sinking a little bit, they throw things overboard and ... they probably looked at Canada and said, hey, it's about three per cent of our business, we're not making money yet, let's just cut this off."

Professor Nicole Rourke, who teaches business at St. Clair College in Windsor, Ont., says the rise in online shopping is hurting chains like Nordstrom that have an extensive brick-and-mortar presence and associated costs.

"It's a tough time to be in the department store industry," she said in an interview. "E-commerce has really made it very difficult to stay in business and be profitable."

The chain couldn't manage to make any more money selling online than it could in its physical stores, and as part of its wind-down in Canada, the chain has actually halted all of its online sales at Nordstrom.ca, even as the physical stores will soon be offering liquidation sales to entice shoppers.

Nordstrom's inability to make online shopping work for them says a lot about why they went under, because Rourke says the Canadian marketplace is uniquely positioned to be ideal for those who can excel at e-commerce.

"Because we're so geographically dispersed, we are the perfect setting to do e-commerce in," she said. "That's something that's often overlooked by a lot of American retailers."

Ultimately, Nordstrom may be destined to be just the latest in a long line of American chains that came north with great expectations, only to fail. "They looked at their product lines, and they just said, You know what, we're not going to make it in Canada. It's just not profitable enough for us," she said.

"They gave it a good old college try but they just couldn't see the growth potential."

https://www.cbc.ca/news/business/nor...ysis-1.6767321
Reply With Quote
     
     
This discussion thread continues

Use the page links to the lower-right to go to the next page for additional posts
 
 
Reply

Go Back   SkyscraperPage Forum > Regional Sections > Canada > Ontario > Ottawa-Gatineau > Business, Politics & the Economy
Forum Jump



Forum Jump


All times are GMT. The time now is 4:42 PM.

     
SkyscraperPage.com - Privacy Statement - Top

Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.7
Copyright ©2000 - 2026, vBulletin Solutions, Inc.