YES went to @smithcollege but saw The Vagina Monologues performed by NYU’s Graduate Women (i.e., women who are studying for their masters in global affairs, MDs, JDs, MBAs) for the first time tonight. My close friend/fellow power woman Kimberly Mullen (that is her in the picture) killed it. Did not use notes or prompter! Eve Ensler still needs notes! Makes sense though, Kim is getting her masters and is passionately fighting against sex trafficking all over the world. So impressed by all of these women tonight! #VDAY2014 #onebillionrising #powerwomen #love #rockstars
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WTH? This green juice comes with a warning label. Sounds like a...
WTH? This green juice comes with a warning label. Sounds like a Dateline/ investigative piece for Marie Claire. cc: @leajgoldman #whenjuiceskill
Fashion #SOTU 2014 update (for those that care): FLOTUS wearing...
Fashion #SOTU 2014 update (for those that care): FLOTUS wearing forest green Alaia (French by way of Tunisia designer) dress with cardigan reported by Vanessa Friedman at Financial Times. Discuss.
What to buy RIGHT NOW: A Guide to Mid- January Shoppers...
What to buy RIGHT NOW: A Guide to Mid- January Shoppers Paradise
Visit NBCNews.com for breaking news, world news, and news about the economy
According to the National Retail Federation, Americans spent around $601.8 billion dollars on holiday gifts for 2013. If you were not one of those people, you are in luck!
Stores tend to drop prices on items like clothing, shoes, toys and electronics in hopes of getting rid of some of that holiday overstock that didn’t sell. Even though $601.8 billion sounds like a huge amount, stores anticipated shoppers would spend even more this year and planned accordingly. When that didn’t happen, they went into post holiday panic mode. Full shelves mid January = lost profits which means retail death. To avoid the downward spiral, stores must get rid of the merchandise STAT, even if it means implementing massive profit losing discounts. Guess who benefits from the push to purge? The shopper!
Best places to get the lowest priced items:
Jeans: When it comes to jeans, JC Penney has the best prices on their in-house denim at a sale price of $19.99 as well as Arizona AZ jeans sale priced at $9- $14. Keep in mind J.C. Penney has ongoing promotions which may take off up to 30-40% off the price.
Dresses: JC Penney hits it out of the park with its Worthington contrast sweater dresses sale priced at $14.99. Fun fact: stores tend to put their winter merchandise on deep discount mid- January to make room for spring merchandise. The savings gets passed on to you the shopper.
Coats: Speaking of winter, stores like Macys are marking down their coats by almost 70% off. You can expect to see $300 coats marked down in some cases to $139.
Shoes: Just like winter apparel, stores have to make room for summer shoes. JC Penney are marking down winter shoes by 40-80% for certain items. The Call it Spring Georgina Zip Wedge Boots have a sale price of $36.99. You can’t for get the guys either: New Balance Men’s Sneakers have a sale price of $35.99.
Toys: Stores like Toys R’ Us are seeing the best discounts all year and since they too overstocked to anticipate a massive holiday rush, many of their toys are discounted up to 80%. The Playskool Rocktivity Sit Crawl and Stand Band has a sale price of $34.98 down form $79. Another fun fact: Toys R’ Us is a great place to purchase discounted electronics. The Vivitar 16.1 MP Vivicam with a sale price of $29.98!
These are just a few of many discounts we are about to see as we come to the end of January. If you are in the market for a large TV, grill or appliance now is the time to pull the trigger- it only goes up from here, people.
- Hitha Prabhakar (Hitha Prabhakar is the Chief Research Officer of AitchPe Retail Advisory www.hithaprabhakar.com)
No Makeup Monday. Let’s start a trend, people. #NMM
No Makeup Monday. Let’s start a trend, people. #NMM
(via Anne Hathaway Leaves Longtime Stylist Rachel Zoe After a...
Retail Shares Struggle on Tougher Outlook- WWD
(Re-published from Womens Wear Daily January 27th, 2014 written by Arnold J. Karr) For retailers, the disappointments keep coming.
After an abbreviated holiday season in which unprecedented levels of promotion failed to generate increases in traffic and further depleted top-line results, stores are now facing disappointing January sales, observers say, and the inability of promotions to clear inventories as they had hoped.
Adding harsh winter weather to an already icy fiscal mix, expectations for fourth-quarter earnings and inventory levels have taken on a far more negative tone and retail shares have started 2014 by moving in reverse. After rising an eye-opening 43.9 percent in 2013 as hopes for consumer spending strengthened, the S&P 500 Retailing Industry Group has fallen back 5 percent so far this year, shedding 2.1 percent last week alone. In 16 trading days so far in 2014, the index has trended down in all but four, including the last seven in a row.
The index’s recent weakness worsened Friday in an abysmal day for the market overall. The Dow Jones Industrial Average fell 318.24 points, or 2 percent, to 15,879.11, and the S&P 500 contracted 38.17 points, or 2.1 percent, to 1,790.29. The retailing index declined 1.9 percent to end the week at 892.58.
In a single day, the Dow, S&P 500 and retail index surrendered the respective milestones of 16,000, 1,800 and 900 attained at the end of 2013. Retail last year outperformed the Dow, which rose 26.5 percent, and the S&P, up 29.6 percent.
But that was before many retailers began reporting disappointing numbers for holiday and pulling down their earnings projections accordingly. In a research note entitled “Frozen by Polar Vortex, Slow Economy,” Jharonne Martis, director of consumer research at Thomson Reuters, noted that “pre-announcements” among retailers, who will begin reporting fourth-quarter results next month, have been overwhelmingly negative. Of 92 companies — apparel and broadlines retailers among them — who have updated guidance for the quarter, 74 have lowered projections, 15 have lifted them and three have left them unchanged.
The biggest declines among U.S. retail stocks so far this year have come from companies that needed to pull down fourth-quarter projections based on in-store and even online weakness. The Bon-Ton Stores Inc. cited “unfavorable winter weather conditions” earlier this month when it said it faced the possibility of a fourth-quarter loss. After boasting of earlier comparable-store gains, J.C. Penney Co. Inc. provided no specific numbers when it reported it was “pleased” with its holiday performance and soon after said it would close 33 underperforming stores in a cost-cutting move. Sears Holdings Corp. projected a larger-than-expected loss for the quarter when it divulged that comps in November and December were down 7.4 percent.
Lululemon Athletica Inc. reduced profit expectations after revising its comp outlook to down in the low- to midsingle digits, after initially expecting a flat quarter as it moves to recover from a problem-plagued year in 2013. On the same day, Ascena Retail Group Inc., Express Inc. and Stage Stores Inc. brought down earnings expectations, as did L Brands Inc., parent of Victoria’s Secret, based on disappointing comps.
Teen retailers struggled through 2013 and have continued to do so as 2014 gets under way. Retail Metrics Inc. expects the teen sector to collectively report a 7 percent decline in fourth-quarter comps and described it as the “weakest of any retail segment.” Fourth-quarter comps among all reporting retailers are expected to grow just 0.7 percent — 1 percent excluding Wal-Mart Stores Inc.
Aéropostale Inc. has seen its shares wither 20.1 percent this year, after declining 30.1 percent in 2013, after it canceled plans to appear at the ICR XChange in Orlando, Fla., this month, with speculation that it might be in talks to be taken over by any number of private equity players giving way to complaints among analysts about a lack of transparency.
American Eagle Outfitters Inc., considered by many to be best positioned to recapture some momentum in the teen market, turned heads last week when it said that Robert Hanson was out as its chief executive officer, succeeded on an interim basis by chairman Jay Schottenstein.
“Of the Three A’s” — American Eagle, Aéropostale and Abercrombie — “a lot of people felt that American Eagle was the strongest and Hanson had made a positive difference,” said analyst Janet Kloppenburg, president of JJK Research. “Now they have to bring in a new ceo who’ll go through a honeymoon as he or she figures out what to do with the assortment, how sharply to discount remaining inventory.
“And it’s disturbing when you see heads start to roll at good companies in any case,” she added.
Kloppenburg noted that some of the weakness in stocks in general is derived from doubts about, for instance, the strength of the manufacturing sector in China and uncertainty in many emerging markets. Retailers’ concerns are less global in nature, she said.
“Analysts, myself included, expected margins to be tough and sales to be challenging, but we figured that, with discounting, there’d be some success in working inventories down and moving the needle at least a bit in January,” she said. “But the discounts are deeper and it doesn’t seem to be generating traffic or sales, and a lot of us are beginning to look at our estimates for retailers for the first quarter, both the top and bottom line, and wonder if they need to be brought down. There’s no overwhelming fashion trend coming for spring and there are a lot of questions about inventory. There is a large body of evidence telling investors to be conservative.”
Craig Johnson, president of Customer Growth Partners, expects that final holiday numbers from the Commerce Department will point to a 3 percent gain in spending for holiday merchandise once adjusted by the government. He noted that while winter storms and the abbreviated holiday calendar hurt results last year, a more fundamental challenge was simply a lack of spending money in consumers’ wallets. The Commerce Department’s Bureau of Economic Analysis reported growth in disposable personal income of just 0.1 percent in November.
“If there’s no real disposable personal income growth, you will never have strong retail spending growth,” he said, noting that the metric ran above 3.5 percent in the years prior to the Great Recession.
He noted that the apparel business has shifted from wants to needs, with consumers more interested in subscriber-based services providing experiential value, such as cable and telecommunications providers. And, with inventories growing faster than comps at retail, promotional proclivity has lingered, driving down dollars per transaction and further limiting revenue gains.
Johnson noted that the growth in online shopping is among the factors pushing up the rate of merchandise returns to retailers, eroding fourth-quarter results further. Promotions have contributed to the growth in returns observed by Johnson and his associates.
“They tend to get people goosed up beyond what they can afford or like,” the CGP official said.
Rebecca Duval, an analyst at BlueFin Research Partners and a former retailer, said that the reluctance to pad inventories was being felt throughout the industry supply chain now, with orders being pushed back, reduced in size or in some cases canceled altogether. “The Street is going to be looking for margin recovery in the first quarter,” she said, “and it’s not going to be easy to come by. Investors are asking who has a fundamentally strong story for 2014, and there will be some winners, but a lot of the analysts’ numbers are going to have to come down for a lot of the companies they cover first.”
Who Wore it Better #Grammys 2014 version: Reem Acra cocktail...
Who Wore it Better #Grammys 2014 version: Reem Acra cocktail dress on Sara Bareilles (who I adore) after she sang a duet w/ Carole King or me, @hithaprabhakar? Discuss.
Macklemore & Ryan Lewis Unleash in NYC (and the reason why I barely use Uber)
Target credit card breach: it's worse than you think.
40 million. 70 million. Now close to 110 million customers of Target ($TGT) have not received word their personal data including financial information, phone numbers and home addresses are now in the hands of overseas hackers. Sound like a scene from Girl with a Dragon Tattoo? The executives at Target only wish. Right now the retailer is getting ready for a congressional probe into their consumer protection practices. This is a run down of what you should know (source: Reuters):
What is happening: Democratic members of the Financial Services Committee of the U.S. House of Representatives are calling for the panel to investigate the hacking of credit card data belonging to millions of customers of Target Corp stores.
The letter said a hearing should review current consumer protection laws and determine what could be done to ensure the future security of consumers' card information.
Quote from the letter: "It is incumbent upon our Committee to explore whether industry data protection standards are appropriate, and examine whether heightened regulatory standards are needed to more effectively protect consumers," the Democrats wrote.
What that means: Congress wants to figure out if Target was in violation of failing to effectively protect the consumer.
Hearing is supposed to be scheduled for late January.
What can we expect out of the hearing: Would allow for an airing of grievances and potentially bring Target officials to Washington for a grilling about how the case has been handled, they would not necessarily result in taking any kind of action or in legislation.
In addition: The Federal Trade Commission, the Securities and Exchange Commission and state attorneys general would potentially look into Target's actions in this situation.
The FTC does not confirm or deny the existence of ongoing investigations and would only get involved if Target is shown to have failed to protect its customers' data.
Target has said it is working in partnership with the Secret Service, the lead agency involved in the data breach case, and the Department of Justice but did not comment on any FTC involvement
Why do we care/why is this important: Not real Federal regulation on the retail side when it comes to security and consumer protection.
A bill by Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Patrick Leahy remains the only data security bill on tap for now-- THAT'S THE ONLY BILL THAT EXISTS!
FTC has the power to investigate companies’ privacy and information security policies and ensure that they meet proper standards, it has asserted.
It has previously brought cases against companies that it determined didn’t do enough to protect consumer data, and Blumenthal suggested it should consider doing so again.
QUOTE: “Given the scope and duration of Target’s recent data breach, it appears that Target may have failed to employ reasonable and appropriate security measures to protect personal information,” Blumenthal wrote. “If Target failed to adequately protect customer information, it denied customers the protection that they rightly expect when a business collects their personal information. Its conduct would be unfair and deceptive, and it would clearly violate the FTC Act.”
Additional info on $TGT you as a consumer should know:
Point of sale: As a merchant, you’d better make sure shoppers trust that they’re not exposing themselves to identity theft and credit-card fraud every time they swipe. Even Target, a huge company with big bucks to spend on security, hasn’t managed to assure such certainty (source: Bloomberg BusinessWeek)
Methods hackers use to get information:
Skimming: Attaching a physical device to a machine to gather information
"RAM Scraping": "Random Access Memory" Malware scans computer system's memory for personal information.
U.S. Computer Emergency Readiness Team (U.S.-CERT), a cyber watchdog that’s part of the Department of Homeland Security.
Target has not disclosed how malware got into the system
#lategram from yesterday. On w/ the awesome Liz Dunn + Melissa...
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This morning we run for #Boston.
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Photo
#lategram earlier today on my way to MSNBC for “3 Big...
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Best customer service ever: a thank you note from @trinaturk....
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