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Waldenbooks stores in Greensboro, Winston-Salem to close

Friday, November 6, 2009
(Updated 8:12 am)

NEW YORK (AP) — Borders Group Inc., the second-largest U.S. bookstore chain, said Thursday it would shutter more of its small-format Waldenbooks stores in January as it focuses on its more profitable superstores.

The company is closing 200 Waldenbooks and Borders Express stores and cutting 1,500 jobs in January to make the chain smaller and more profitable.

Included in the closure list are Waldenbooks stores in Four Seasons Town Centre in Greensboro and Hanes Mall in Winston-Salem. A total of eight stores in North Carolina are set to close, including locations in Asheville, Chapel Hill, Hickory, Monroe, New Bern, Shelby.

Borders, based in Ann Arbor, Mich., said the closings would leave about 130 stores in its Waldenbooks Specialty Retail unit, which includes Waldenbooks and Borders Express stores, still in business.

The company said the closing will not affect any Borders superstores or any of its mall kiosks, including 500 Day by Day Calendar Co. spots and other mall-based stores.

Borders has been slowly closing Waldenbooks. It shut down 112 stores fiscal 2008 and an average of about 66 stores each year between fiscal 2001 through 2007.

Michael Norris, senior trade analyst at Simba Information, said the move is a way to focus on superstores, which make more money and cost less per square foot to operate than smaller stores.

"In a way they kind of have to do this, because Barnes & Noble is ahead of them in phasing out small-format stores," he said.

Borders' chief rival, Barnes & Noble, based in New York, said last month it would close all of its remaining 50 B. Dalton stores by the end of January.

But Borders said it expects a smaller Waldenbooks segment, with 130 stores, can be profitable.

"We believe there remains an opportunity to profitably operate a much smaller Waldenbooks segment that complements our core Borders superstore business and continues to serve readers in their communities," said Borders CEO Ron Marshall in a statement.

Previously purchased gift cards will be valid as long as the stores remain open and at any Borders, Waldenbooks or Borders.com, the company said.

Borders shares rose 9 cents, or 4.3 percent, to $2.20 during aftermarket trading.

Comments

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JoeScott

November 6, 2009 - 8:21 am EST

Their limited shelf space means that more times than not, they don't have the books I am looking for. With a Borders nearby and a B&N down the road, there really is no point in visiting the Greensboro Waldenbooks store whatsoever.

John Newsom

November 6, 2009 - 9:11 am EST

I'm amazed that Walden and B.Dalton hung on for as long as they did. I spent a ton of money in the B.Dalton and Walden at Regency Square in Richmond back when there weren't many other options. But I can't say I'll miss either store.

Lakeshia

November 6, 2009 - 10:03 am EST

Amazon.com is hard to beat for price and selection -

GBO_Yoda

November 6, 2009 - 1:50 pm EST

I have never really understood paying full retail for a book.If you have that much money go on amazon get two or three books for the same price of one and spread the education I say.What is the difference ? College ,Technical ,Nursing students need your overwhelming leftovers of books/cash I can assure you.

dusenberry

November 7, 2009 - 7:10 am EST

These small stores owned by the large stores stay in business because of the low cost of books from the distributors. Mom and Pop stores never had a chance because they dumped all books to major accounts as soon people lost interest in them. Espeially the books on the best seller list. I remember seeing Ollie Norths book about Iran Contra in a popular local store for $3.99. The same book of the same quality cost Mom and Pop stores $ 11.99 and sold for $ $16.99. Talk about a level playing field. That's how they sell the books for 40 % off retail.

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