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Posted: Thursday, 01 May 2008 8:11PM

Home Depot to Close 15 Underperforming Stores

ATLANTA (AP)  -- It's been 4 years since former Home Depot Chief Executive Bob Nardelli's bold prediction that the home improvement retailer could sustain ``unlimited growth'' without significantly affecting sales at established stores.

1010 WINS Audio: Glenn Schuck Reports

That statement was made during much better economic times.

The Atlanta-based company, under different leadership, a different growth philosophy and amid an ailing housing market, put the brakes Thursday on some of its future expansion plans and said it would do what was previously unthinkable -- close 15 of its underperforming flagship stores.

It is the first time the world's largest home improvement store chain has ever closed a flagship store for performance reasons. The move, to be completed within the next two months, will affect 1,300 employees.

The stores to be closed include two in New Jersey, in East Brunswick and Saddle Brook.

The company reiterated its intention to open 55 new stores in the 2009 fiscal year, though it will no longer pursue the opening of roughly 50 U.S. stores that have been in its new store pipeline, in some cases for more than 10 years.

Home Depot shares rose $1.07, or 3.7 percent, to close at $29.87.

``By building fewer stores, in the best locations, and making sure our existing stores are profitable, our company will be in a much stronger competitive position,'' said CEO Frank Blake, who took over for Nardelli in January 2007.

Home Depot shares rose $1.17, or 4.1 percent, to $29.97 in afternoon trading.

Nardelli, now the chief at automaker Chrysler LLC, had other ideas on Nov. 18, 2003, when he told The Associated Press that The Home Depot Inc.'s robust new store growth would continue unabated and suggested the retailer may one day expand into Europe and Asia.

The company has added about 600 stores since then, but has scaled back new store growth in the last few years. Its only stores outside North America are a dozen in China, and those were obtained through an acquisition.

Some analysts and large investors have worried in the past that as Home Depot gets bigger, it would invariably put stores in direct competition with existing stores, a practice known in the industry as cannibalization.

Home Depot in the past has justified cannibalization by saying it increases the company's overall market share.

On Thursday, Blake said Home Depot's goal now is to ``reduce cannibalization and drive higher returns.''

Growth aside, Home Depot previously had never closed one of its flagship stores for performance reasons.

On Sept. 21, 2007, Blake told AP that the company had no plans to make any broad-based job cuts or reduce the number of its core retail stores in the face of a persistent housing slump that wasn't expected to improve anytime soon.

But since then, the economy and the housing market woes have grown worse, and Home Depot has announced several rounds of job cuts.

In December, Home Depot said it would cut 950 jobs and close three call centers that handle orders for home installation. The next month, Home Depot said it would cut 500 jobs at its headquarters.

Home Depot has sought over the last year to focus more attention on its core stores. In August 2007, it sold its wholesale distribution business, HD Supply, to a group of private equity firms for $8.5 billion.

Besides the two in New Jersey, the stores Home Depot said Thursday it plans to close consist of three in Wisconsin, two in Ohio, two in Indiana and one each in Kentucky, Louisiana, Minnesota, North Dakota, New York and Vermont.

A company spokesman said some of the affected employees will be relocated, while others could lose their jobs.

Spokesman Ron DeFeo said Home Depot has only closed one of its flagship stores previously because of structural damage. Last year, Home Depot closed its 11 Landscape Supply stores. It also has previously shut a number of its Expo design centers.

Due to the store closings announced Thursday, Home Depot will record a charge of roughly $186 million, including inventory markdowns of $11 million and severance of $8 million. It also will record a charge of roughly $400 million related to development costs and ongoing obligations associated with the future store locations that it is scrapping.

New store capital spending will be reduced by $1 billion over the next three years, Home Depot said.

Excluding charges, the company reiterated that its diluted earnings per share from continuing operations are expected to decline by 19 percent to 24 for fiscal 2008. Home Depot releases its first-quarter results May 20.

Home Depot operates 2,258 stores in the United States, Canada, Mexico and China.

Photo by 1010 WINS' Glenn Schuck: Home Depot in Saddle Brook, N.J.

On the Net:

The Home Depot Inc.: http://www.homedepot.com
____________________________________________________

Locations of Home Depot Stores to Close

- #2015 East Fort Wayne, Ind.

- #2032 Marion, Ind.

- #2310 Frankfort, Ky.

- #379 Opelousas, La.

- #2819 Cottage Grove, Minn.

- #6901 East Brunswick, N.J.

- #6904 Saddle Brook, N.J.

- #6171 Rome, N.Y.

- #3702 Bismarck, N.D.

- #3874 Findlay, Ohio

- #3865 Lima, Ohio

- #4552 Brattleboro, Vt.

- #4932 Beaver Dam, Wis.

- #4933 Fond du Lac, Wis.

- #4913 NW Milwaukee, Wis.


(TM & Copyright 2008 CBS Radio Inc. and its relevant subsidiaries. CBS RADIO & EYE Logo TM & Copyright 2008 CBS Broadcasting Inc. Used under license. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report. In the interest of timeliness, this story is fed directly from the newswire and may contain occasional typographical errors.)
 
 
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