Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
"The Warehouse" logo used up to 2006. No stores in New Zealand use this version anymore. All stores in Australia used this logo until they were renamed in 2008. The first Warehouse Group store opened in Wairau Road North Shore, Auckland in 1982. [8] [9] In 1994, Warehouse was added to the New Zealand Exchange under the symbol TWH. [10]
Caltex New Zealand: Petrol station [58] Petrol, diesel, groceries [58] 138 [58] 39 [58] Z Energy [58] 1936 [58] Wellington CBD [58] Carl's Jr. New Zealand: Fast food outlet [59] Fast food, burgers, snacks, soft drinks [59] 15 [59] 8 [59] Restaurant Brands [60] 2011 in Takānini, Auckland [61] Penrose, Auckland [60] Carters: Building supply ...
The Howard Smith Group purchase also included Benchmark Building Supplies, a New Zealand chain of 32 stores, including nine Auckland stores. These were also closed or rebranded as Bunnings by 2003. [15] [16] [17] Until then, Bunnings had just three New Zealand stores. [18] [17] By 2008, it had 14 large warehouse stores in the country. [19] [18]
Tindall founded The Warehouse in 1982 after 12 years with retailer George Court & Sons as Merchandise Director. In 2009 The Warehouse Group had sales of NZ$1.72 billion. [2] In 2018, The Warehouse Group had 251 stores throughout New Zealand, The Warehouse, Warehouse Stationery, Noel Leeming, Torpedo7 and TheMarket stores. [3]
Trade Me is New Zealand's largest online auction and classifieds website. Managed by Trade Me Ltd., the site was founded in 1999 by New Zealand entrepreneur Sam Morgan, who sold it to Fairfax in 2006 for NZ$700 million. [1] Trade Me was publicly listed as a separate entity on 13 December 2011 under the ticker "TME".
Kogan.com acquired New Zealand-based online retailer Mighty Ape in December 2020 for $122.4 million. [17] At December 2021, Kogan.com delivered $698 million in gross sales for the first half of FY22 (FY21 annual Gross Sales: $1.79 billion).
There were 20 stores in New Zealand. [21] In 2015, Kmart also introduced self-checkouts, which have now been rolled out to all Kmart stores. In August 2017, Wesfarmers purchased the use of the Kmart brand name in Australia and New Zealand for $100 million, ending a long-term licensing agreement between Coles and Sears for use of the Kmart name ...
His first catalogue was a single sheet of paper with a price list, 8 by 12 inches, showing the merchandise for sale and ordering instructions. Montgomery Ward identified a market of merchant-wary farmers in the Midwest. Within two decades, his single-page list of products grew into a 540-page illustrated book selling over 20,000 items.