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Home Improvement (Lowe's, Rona, Home Depot)

From: www.theglobeandmail.com/s...iness/home
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Rona hammers out bold strategy
U.S., women and green in its sights

MARINA STRAUSS
From Wednesday's Globe and Mail
TORONTO — Robert Dutton is mapping out a bold expansion plan for home improvement retailer Rona Inc. that will see it enter the U.S. market by next year, and launch new specialty stores geared to women and the environmentally conscious.

It's a bid by the Rona chief executive officer to reach out to a younger generation of hardware shoppers while also bulking up the chain's operations as it prepares to face a big new U.S. competitor in Canada in 2007.

"In the next 10 years, we're going to have lots of change in the way we're going to sell our products -- home renovation products and garden products," Mr. Dutton said yesterday after speaking at the Retail Council of Canada's annual conference.

"It's going to be a revolution."

Mr. Dutton is searching for growth opportunities at a time when the sizzling home improvement retail market is showing signs of a slowdown. At the same time, Lowe's Cos. Inc., the second-largest U.S. chain in the field after Home Depot Inc., will put added pressure on Canadian retailers as it gets ready to open its first stores here next year.

The challenges don't stop there. A younger generation of homeowners will be shopping more, bringing with it its own expectations and demands.

Mr. Dutton is preparing for the shifts. He said Rona is well positioned with its array of different-sized stores, from big boxes to small shops, all catering to a wide range of customers and communities.

In the coming years, Mr. Dutton will focus more on small and mid-sized stores partly because he believes that they appeal to Generations X and Y -- those born between 1965 and 2000 -- who value the service and convenience of a compact boutique.

Smaller stores work well in so-called lifestyle shopping centres, an emerging mall concept in North America. They feature shops in a simulated old-time main street setting, and cater to a well-heeled customer.

"If we want to be there, we're going to have to adapt our store with a different approach," he said.

Specialty stores are one approach, he said. A green store will carry products that are designed to limit harm to the environment, he said, while a store geared to women may carry more home decor items.

Rona will launch these new concepts next year or the year after, he said. "We're going to have a change in the behaviour of the consumer. We're going to have to adapt our stores."

South of the border, Mr. Dutton will be hunting for a chain of smaller-sized stores too, he said. He expects to be in the U.S. market by next year, he said. The move will be "prudent," but he also has big dreams.

He wants Rona to become the third-ranked U.S. home improvement retailer. "We can be third place."

He plans to begin the U.S. expansion in the Northeast and East Coast areas because consumers there have buying habits similar to Canadians, he said. "For the next 10 years, North America is going to be a good playground."

At that point, the chain, based in Boucherville, Que., could consider going further abroad, he said.

But before it enters the U.S. market, it needs to boost its operations here, he said.

Rona is rapidly buying up smaller Canadian hardware retailers, recruiting new operators and building 20 new stores annually. It is aiming to ring up $7-billion of sales by the end of 2007, up from the current $5.2-billion.

Rona's stores already try to cater to handywomen with its highly visible home decor sections and an emphasis on personal service. About 52 per cent of the chain's customers are women.

By next year, it will set up in-store boutiques with specialized home security products, while also focusing more on energy-saving and other environmentally friendly merchandise, he said.

It's an attempt to respond to customers' evolving needs, he added. "We adapt our stores to those needs."
 
Toronto
Queen West fears arrival of big box: Home Depot moving in?: Hardware giant said to be eyeing sites downtown
Peter Brieger
National Post
832 words
2 September 2006
National Post
Toronto
A10
English
(c) 2006 National Post . All Rights Reserved.
Larry Krupski hasn't been sleeping very well lately.

The co-owner of Jacobs Hardware on Queen Street West is worried that the store -- which has been in the area for 80 years -- may become a memory if a big-box retailer moves in down the street on one of the trendy neighbourhood's last undeveloped properties.

There is talk about a Home Depot being built on the parking lot at Queen and Portland streets, and though he is getting a lot of support from community residents, Mr. Krupski also knows that "the bottom line is price" for most shoppers.

"Queen Street is Queen Street because of the little businesses," the hardware store owner said. "I can compete on some [products], but the bigger stuff I can't. I lie awake trying to think about what to do. It scares me."

And he is not the only one.

This week, a group of concerned residents and business owners held a meeting to figure out how to stymie efforts to place a big retailer on the site. The group has petitioned City Hall to designate the land a heritage site and they hope a city-owned laneway that snakes through the property will not be sold off, forcing a smaller development.

Home Depot says it is looking at several sites downtown and RioCan, the property developer that purchased the site in January, says it has not reached a final agreement with any retailer.

"But retailers in the past five years have learned that if they want stores in urban areas, they have to be sensitive to the neighbourhood," said Edward Sonshine, RioCan's chief executive. "They don't want to piss off the neighbourhood because those are their customers."

The company wants a site that will combine a retailer with residential property and fit into a community known for its bohemian residents, local watering holes, small clothing stores and a few tattoo shops.

The fight comes after years of well-publicized fights between large retailers and neighbourhood groups over downtown property developments in North American cities.

Mr. Sonshine argued that a large-retailer downtown means fewer people driving out the suburbs -- and less traffic on Toronto's already clogged highways.

"And that's good for everybody," he said. "You've got to give people the opportunity to live, work and shop in their area."

John van Nostrand, a partner at Architects Alliance, argued that it is possible to fit a large retailer in a unique neighbourhood like Queen Street West without ruining the neighbourhood.

"Eaton's was the first big-box store in Canada, and it's right at Queen Street," he said. "You can have big-box stores in the city. But you can't put one in that looks like the kind in the suburbs."

Chris Ouellette, who is running for a spot on city council this year, does not buy that argument and rejects Mr. Sonshine's contention that the development "won't stick out like a sore thumb."

"It's going to be an ugly building regardless," Mr. Ouellette said. "I'm dead certain about that. It won't fit into the rest of the streetscape."

Mr. Ouellette, who recently left a real estate company to run for council, says the site will bring traffic snarls to an area already short on parking.

Not to mention that there is a social trend back to shopping locally at small stores, "where they know your name," said the political hopeful.

That is how Edmund Brunka, an employee at Jacobs, sees it.

"I can't go to the beer store without bumping into a customer," he said.

Four years ago, Elana White started Outer Layer, which sits across Portland Street from the parking lot. The funky bath boutique and card shop sells, among other things, T-shirts with the logo "I'm not a lesbian but I admire their work."

"These stores are small enough that someone with a dream can work their ass off and start a business," Ms. White said. "Once you have a 10,000-square-foot store here, that's not going to happen anymore."

Waving at several people he knows, Peter Cherniawski worries that a big development could change the character of the street where his parents opened a now-closed butcher shop in the '50s.

"I'm not against progress," said the owner of Bigfoot Wear and West Camera, a photo shop directly across Queen Street from the proposed development. "It just depends on the kind of progress."
 
Lowe's lands in Canada
Sep. 21, 2006. 02:55 PM
RITA TRICHUR
CANADIAN PRESS


U.S. home-improvement chain Lowe's Cos. Inc. (NYSE: LOW) broke ground on its first Canadian store in Hamilton on Thursday, saying it has its sights set on about a dozen more big-box locations across Ontario.

The Mooresville, N.C.-based retailer is on track to launching six to 10 stores in the Toronto area during the second half of 2007, including sites in Brantford, Brampton and Toronto.

The other locations remain secret but have been approved by the company's real estate committee, said Lowe's Canada president Doug Robinson.

"It is a very exciting time for us to see the shovel turn on the first bit of dirt on our first store in Canada," he told reporters at the company's Toronto office. "Our focus is on Ontario, but we will look at other opportunities."

Each store, sprawling over a whopping 145,000 square feet, will cost an average of $20.5 million and create up to 175 jobs apiece.

"We have begun the search for potential store employees with home improvement know-how and a passion for customer service," Robinson said, adding the company has already received over 3,500 inquires.

The U.S. chain has long been expected to bring its stores northward to compete with Canadian stalwarts Rona Inc. (TSX: RON) and Canadian Tire Corp. (TSX: CTC.A) and fellow U.S. import Home Depot (NYSE: HD), carving out its own slice of the country's $28-billion home improvement market.

"It is the sweet spot of retail," said John Chamberlain, a retail analyst with Dominion Bond Rating Service. "There seems to be room for more competition."

Lowe's plans to customize its store layout and product selection to cater to Canadians. When pressed for details, Robinson said each location will feature a food-service area, perhaps even an established coffee shop chain: "We're working with lots of providers to pick the right one."

With respect to its product offering, Canadians have "more contemporary" tastes, he said. When it comes to lighting, for example, Canadians show preferences for recessed and track illumination, while Americans favour more "colonial tastes" such as traditional lamps.

"What it says to us is the fashion is different," Robinson said, adding those variances are driven by culture and community.

"While we see some fashion differences in Toronto, I'm sure when we start looking at stores in Alberta, B.C., the Maritimes, Quebec we're going to see fashion differences in those markets as well."

Lowe's already is the No. 2 appliance retailer in the United States and hopes to make similar inroads in Canada, given that its stores are generally larger than its competitors'.

It also plans to offer installation services, while dabbling in financial offerings such as its Lowe's credit card and installed-project card program.

In the United States, Lowe's stores actively cater to women with wide aisles, bright lights and a merchandise mix that includes softer home decor products.

Rona, Canadian Tire and Home Depot have already employed similar strategies in Canada, so when asked if there is room for Lowe's, Robinson replied: "Customers decide every day with their wallets what competitors are successful and which aren't."

But at least one retail rival was quick to suggest Thursday that Lowe's will have to play catch-up.

"They have a long way to go to gain the market share that we have," said Gino DiGioacchino, vice-president of merchandising for Home Depot Canada.

Home Depot, which has been in Canada for 12 years, claims a market share of 15 per cent with 144 stores of varying sizes. It plans to increase that number to 155 by the end of January 2007.

"What they may not really understand is how different the (Canadian) consumer is," he added. "Yes, we speak English as primary language and we have a secondary language being French. We're very, very different in how we approach home improvement and how we approach our disposable income."
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Any ideas where the Toronto locations will be located? I suspect one in the Eglinton & Warden area. There are 2 RONA locations just several blocks apart.
 
Brampton? I thought that Brampton's been saturated, with two Home Depots (and a third under construction at 7 and Airport) and two Ronas (one a former Building Box). I have trouble believing that there's enough a market for 6 big box home improvement stores in a place with just over 425,000. Mississauga has enough as well - 3 HDs (and two more just outside its boundaries), 2 or 3 Ronas.

Brantford's interesting. Maybe that town is finally doing well again.
 
From: www.canada.com/nationalpo...0dba164295
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Friday » December 8 » 2006

Home Depot braces for rival Lowe's debut
Triples appliances space

Hollie Shaw
Financial Post

Thursday, November 30, 2006

Home Depot Canada is making a major push into appliances in advance of rival Lowe's Cos. entry into Canada next year, tripling store square footage in the category and offering a far greater breadth of selection.

The country's biggest home improvement chain is expanding its appliance departments to 2,500 square feet from an average of 880 square feet, and displaying up to 200 items compared with 70. The upgraded departments will be in 76 Home Depot stores by the end of next year, roughly half of the retailer's store network. The retailer has reconfigured its flooring and tools areas to accommodate the changes.

"We have been taking market share so aggressively ... that we now have a greater assortment to provide our customers with what they are asking for," said Karol Allen, divisional merchandise director at Home Depot Canada.

North Carolina-based Lowe's, second in market share behind Home Depot in the United States, is that country's second-largest retailer of appliances behind Sears Holdings Corp.

"Lowe's is definitely focusing on appliances, but this initiative happened long before Lowe's announced it was coming in Canada," Ms. Allen said, noting Home Depot's appliance sales grew 25% last year and were expected to climb more than 30% in 2006.

Home Depot Canada began selling appliances in 2001 after seeing an opportunity in a category dominated by Sears Canada, which at the time had a staggering 40% share of the market.

But savvy big-box chains have steadily eroded the business at traditional appliance retailers. Sears has opened some furniture and appliance outlets in response, but its market share has still tumbled.

"It makes sense that people have moved into shopping at [home improvement chains] because people doing renovations can do a one-stop shop there and they can also get financing for the entire project," from contracting to countertops, said retail consultant Richard Talbot, president of Talbot Consultants.

Sears Canada's share of the $3.5-billion major-appliance market stood at 29.3% for the year ending September, 2006, according market researcher Synovate Canada's home durables tracking study. Home Depot's share was 3.9%, behind The Brick (7.8%), Future Shop (4.6%), and Leon's (4.2%).

"Consumer demand for major appliances has been very buoyant during the past few years, benefiting in particular from strength in the new and resale home market," said Adrian Murphy, syndicated research services director at Synovate.

"While market leader Sears remains the top retail destination for Canadians looking to buy a major appliance, the space is becoming increasingly competitive."

Research shows consumers will cut corners on commodities in order to splurge on such higher-end goods as appliances with an emphasis on design.

"Appliances have really become a bit of a decor item," Ms. Allen noted, with consumers eschewing the "white boxes" of yesteryear for pricier stainless steel styles or those with added features. "There is more of a design component, and innovation has spurred consumers to rotate their purchases much more rapidly."

Home Depot and rival Rona Inc. of Quebec have been scooping up real estate in advance of the arrival of Lowe's, which is scheduled to open six to 10 big-box stores in Ontario in the second half of 2007. Rona does not sell major appliances.

Home Depot is opening 18 stores this fiscal year -- for a total of 155 stores -- and will likely sustain that pace the following year.

The retailer is also looking at strategies to maintain its market dominance in Canada against Lowe's, which has a reputation for carrying more stylish merchandise. A recent management meeting at Home Depot's headquarters in Atlanta reportedly focused on ways to combat Lowe's in Canada, noted Michael McLarney, publisher of hardware industry magazine Hardlines.
 
From: www.icsc.org/srch/sct/sct...canada.php
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CANADA’S RONA TACKLES U.S. HARDWARE MARKET
By Jennifer Hopfinger

CANADIAN HOME IMPROVEMENT retailer Rona Inc. is heading south, with plans to open stores in the U.S. this year. Though the company declined to reveal specific plans and store counts, CEO Robert Dutton has been quoted as saying that Rona plans to acquire small regional chains and independent hardware stores in the eastern U.S. as growth opportunities in Canada slow down.

Rona, which began as a group of small Québec hardware stores, has grown into Canada’s leading retailer-distributor of hardware, home renovation and gardening products. It boasts about 560 franchise, affiliate and corporate stores, generating about C$5 billion ($4.2 billion) in annual sales. In Québec it boasts a market share of about 43 percent, and in Canada overall it claims roughly 15 percent.

Rona continues to bulk up on the home front, buying smaller Canadian retailers while building about 20 new stores annually. The company’s goal is to generate annual sales of C$7 billion by the end of this year. The acquisitions account for much of Rona’s sales growth, but the company has also seen sales rise in its existing stores.

The stores come in three formats: big boxes (anywhere from 75,000 to 170,000 square feet), midsize stores (about 40,000 square feet, plus an additional 10,000-20,000 square feet for attached lumberyards and garden centers) and small specialty shops. This allows Rona to serve markets of varying sizes and customers of diverse types and to anchor open-air and power centers.

Though south of the border Rona will be entering a market dominated by Home Depot and Lowe’s, opportunities abound, observers say. (Home Depot posts some $82 billion in sales annually, Lowe’s about $43 billion.) The U.S. market is still highly fragmented, with independent retailers making up 60 percent of sales volume in the sector. “There is room for consolidation in the U.S., and Rona is very experienced at that,†said Ed Strapagiel, executive vice president of Kubas Consultants, a Toronto-based consulting firm.

“Canada’s economy is about the size of Texas, but the U.S. is 10 times as large,†he said. “As a result, retail in the U.S. is much more regionalized, and regional chains can dominate certain areas.â€

Moving to the U.S. is a logical step, suggests John Williams, founder of J.C. Williams Group, a Toronto-based retail consultant firm. “Rona has more or less saturated the eastern and central parts of Canada, and there are limited opportunities in western Canada because of population,†Williams said. “So obviously, they have to look at the U.S. market to grow.â€

That said, the current state of the U.S. housing market presents challenges, some say. “The decline in the housing market has been more severe in the U.S. than in Canada,†Strapagiel said. “Rona is going to have to be cautious and move slowly.â€

Some analysts say the housing drop may have bottomed out, or at least that it will do so shortly. “Will the housing market be bad forever? Of course, not,†said Howard Davidowitz, chairman of New York City-based Davidowitz & Associates, a retail consulting and investment banking firm. “There are cycles in every segment. Retailers should take a long-term perspective.â€

And that is just what Rona is doing. The record for Canadian retailers entering the U.S. is mixed, however. Many have failed. Among the roadkill: hard-goods retailer Canadian Tire, fashion retailers La Senza and Le Chateau, and coffee chain Second Cup. Of course, there have been some terrific success stories as well, including Canadian National Railway, financial services firm Manulife and Canada’s largest convenience store chain, Couche-Tard.

But success in Canada does not always translate into success in the U.S. “Rona may be able to dominate Canada, but it’s going to be another ball game in the U.S.,†Williams said. “Rona is going from the minors to the majors.â€

Strapagiel agrees. “Many retail sectors in Canada tend to have oligopolies, where there are two or three strong competitors that operate in a state of tentatively peaceful coexistence,†he said. “In the U.S. the number of competitors multiplies, and their coexistence is not quite so peaceful.â€

But Rona is not without experience against these U.S. competitors back home. Home Depot entered Canada in 1994 and currently operates about 140 giant warehouse stores in 10 Canadian provinces. Home Depot Canada is the second-largest home improvement retailer in Canada after Rona. Lowe’s announced plans to open in Canada back in 2005. It will start with six to 10 stores this year and has an eventual goal of up to 100 stores across the country.

This invasion of its home turf has left Rona little option but to expand into the U.S., says Davidowitz. “Rona can’t stand still in the face of this threat from Lowe’s,†he said. “They have to expand somewhere. Moving into foreign countries isn’t easy, but the U.S. and Canada are neighbors who speak the same language, which helps.â€

And Rona has some competitive advantages that give it a solid shot at success, he adds. “Rona is a unique home improvement retailer in that they have diverse operations,†Davidowitz said. “They are both a retailer and a distributor, and they have different store formats. Because they have the ability to go smaller in terms of store size — and they’re comfortable doing that, because they’ve already done so successfully in Canada — my guess is that they’ll target smaller communities in a few carefully selected markets. That could be their niche.â€

Davidowitz is not alone in that assessment. “Unlike Home Depot and Lowe’s, Rona has a portfolio of banners that include big boxes and corner hardware stores,†said Strapagiel. “Some retailers have one concept, but Rona has many cards to play. If the big-box business goes soft, Rona can focus elsewhere. That’s a real competitive edge.â€

Smaller stores offer better service and more-convenient locations, which could drive traffic to Rona, says Fred Miller, president of Germantown, Tenn.-bad Consumer Specialists. “Rona could fill a different need in the marketplace,†Miller said. “In our studies we’ve found there is enormous cross-shopping in home improvement.â€
 
Lowe's is building a store at Castlefield and Caledonia (and one on Barton Street near Centennial Parkway in Hamilton). I wouldn't consider this really noteworthy, except it is opening right next to a Home Depot in a non-mega-bix-box complex like Heartland or Stockyards even.

I wonder why Lowe's decided to go head-to-head. Home Depot has a lot of stores in this area (near Wilson Subway, Stockyards, where there's also a Rona). Is this market oversaturated?
 
From: http://www.canada.com/ottawacitizen/news/business/story.html?id=fc9dbe01-c0c9-4f35-af11-0b5192d8be40
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Lowe's has eye on Rona: analyst
Robert Gibbens, The Montreal Gazette
Published: Wednesday, July 18, 2007
MONTREAL - Canadian hardware retailer Rona Inc. could face a takeover bid from Lowe's Cos., the second biggest U.S. home-improvement store operator, in the next six months, says an industry watcher.
Hardware and home-renovation retail growth is slowing because of maturing markets in many areas, and Desjardins Securities Inc. analyst Keith Howlett said there is a 40-per-cent chance of Lowe's bidding for Rona at up to $33 per share, a 27-per-cent premium on its closing price yesterday.
A Lowe's takeover of Boucherville, Que.-based Rona has been widely debated since the giant U.S. retailer entered Canada in 2005, saying it would build big-box stores from the ground up to compete with the dominant Home Depot. Other analysts have speculated a large buyout group might try to acquire widely held Rona, planning to sell it later to a strategic buyer.
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Mr. Howlett says Lowe's must decide whether to "build or buy" to establish its presence in Canada. A deal would make it the second biggest player in Canada overnight.
Rona shares lost some shine in May after CEO Robert Dutton reported a sharp decline in first-quarter profit, and warned this year's sales would be weaker than expected. Yesterday, Rona shares gained almost three per cent.
"We can't comment on market speculation," said Lowe's spokesman Chris Ahearn. "We've said we plan to build our stores in Canada from the ground up rather than go the acquisition route."
Claude Guevin, Rona's senior vice-president, said the company is not discussing a sale.
"Other analysts don't share Howlett's view," Mr. Guevin said.
 
Lost in the discussion is the fate of Home Hardware, which began like Rona, as an association of small hardware stores, expanded to mid-sized "building centre" formats - of which many opened just before Aikenhead's started up here.

I still see Home Hardwares downtown and in small towns, but seems to disappear from the mid-sized markets - Home Depot even has stores in places like Timmins now, which with a small, shrinking population of 45,000 and a huge, but sparsely populated, regional hinterland. And Rona, Lowe's and Home Depot fighting amongst themselves in the big markets. It's a weird industry.
 
Concerning Lowe's and Rona as its take-over target, as a corporate entity, is Lowe's considerably larger than Rona?
 
Lowe's had an ad in the Mississauga News for working for them. Said to visit Lowes.ca

You may not know us yet. But you soon will. We're Lowe's, one of the world's largest retailers, now expanding into Canada. Backed by over sixty years of helping customers, we're excited to bring you a new home improvement shopping choice. We'll be opening our first Canadian stores this year throughout the Greater Toronto Area. In the years to come, we expect to open as many as 100 stores across Canada. Get ready, Canada. Let's build something together.

The stores are as follows (from the careers section):

00001 North Hamilton, ON
00002 South Brampton, ON
00003 York, ON
00004 Brantford, ON
00005 North Brampton, ON
00006 Maple, ON
00007 Newmarket, ON
 
Lowe's in Brampton will be right across the street from a Home Depot. Anyone familiar with Brampton - it's on the old AMC plant site at Kennedy and Steeles.

I have no idea where the North Brampton site will be, except perhaps Airport/Bovaird.

With two Ronas (Airport/Queen and the former Building Box at 10 and 7), three Home Depots (Steeles/410, Trinity Common and Airport/Queen) and now two Lowe's, I really see oversaturation taking place. It's insane.
 
I'm surprised Mississauga isn't getting a Lowe's (yet). Mississauga has 3 Home Depots plus one on the Oakville/Mississauga border and 4 RONAs. So compared to Mississauga, yeah, Brampton does seem quite oversaturated, since it has a lower population (although exploding). Though I wouldn't be surprised to see a Lowe's at Heartland.
 

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