Those are the prime examples that I think of. JULIE HYMAN: -the likes of Kmart and Sears. JULIE HYMAN: Yeah, I don't- I mean, it takes retailers a long time to die, unfortunately. You imagine with enough of the kind of profit-margin squeeze that continues to ultimately impact this company and the recovery that they're trying to chart, it's just the larger question of, OK, for anybody who is looking at this stock and still trying to evaluate whether there's an opportunity in this, there's a miracle that's going to have to happen, quite frankly. It's updated most recently as of February 7. And it continues to get updated monthly almost. ![]() Based on the company's own kind of size-eight font, it's about four pages long, and it just continuously fills up or adds on. The list of store closings just continues to climb as of right now. ![]() So, Brad, the struggles continue for this retailer.īRAD SMITH: Yeah, struggling to move through inventory, struggling to keep stores open. And the company's- those fourth-quarter net sales, by the way, the preliminary number of $1.2 billion that I mentioned is versus estimates of about $1.43 billion. Now, analysts were looking for a drop of about 26%, but obviously this is worse than that.
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