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Cencosud S.A. is a publicly traded retail company based in Chile. It is the largest retail company in Chile and the third largest listed retail company in Latin America , competing with the Brazilian Companhia Brasileira de Distribuição and the Mexican Walmart de México y Centroamérica as one of the largest retail companies in the region.
However, at present, share facilities with its parent Cencosud, is a building located at the side of the shopping mall Alto Las Condes, in Kennedy Avenue 9001, Floor 4, Las Condes, Santiago. The department store was founded in 1900 by José María Couso as Mueblería París .
Jumbo is a Chilean hypermarket chain with a presence in Chile, Argentina, and Colombia.Founded in 1976 by Horst Paulmann, Jumbo is a subsidiary and pillar of the Cencosud business consortium, which also owns Santa Isabel, Disco, Super Vea, and Metro supermarkets, as well as Easy and Paris stores.
Easy, based in Florida, Chile, was founded in Argentina in 1993 and the following year opened its first store in Chile. In 2001, it bought out The Home Depot's branches in Argentina and Chile and rebranded them as Easy.
Ripley S. A. is a Chilean department store, financial services, and shopping malls management company. Ripley is headquartered in Santiago, Chile [1] and also has operations in Peru since 1997 and formerly operated in Colombia since 2014 to 2016.
Cencosud was founded by Horst Paulmann on 10 November 1978 when he assumed the role of CEO and chairman. [5] [6] Cencosud employs more than 150,000 people in Chile, Argentina, Colombia, Brazil and Peru, where it operates its supermarket chains (such as Jumbo, Santa Isabel, Disco, Vea, Gbarbosa, Prezunic, Bretas, Perini, Wong and Metro []); department stores (such as París and Johnson's); home ...
En Calgary, Canadá, entre los entrenamientos de fútbol, las horas de trabajo en contabilidad y los ratos de lo que surja con los vecinos, Christianne Boudreau solía usar cada minuto libre que tenía para ver vídeos del Estado Islámico, con la nariz pegada a la pantalla del ordenador.
Two years later, the store was acquired by Chilean company Cencosud for 500 million dollars. [5] This was originally denied by the chain's founder himself and was also taken very negatively by the Peruvian populace, marking the beginning of a slow decline in the chain’s overall market share.