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  2. Fast Retailing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fast_Retailing

    Fast Retailing Co., Ltd. (株式会社ファーストリテイリング, Kabushiki Kaisha Fāsuto Riteiringu) is a public Japanese multinational retail holding company. [3] In addition to its primary subsidiary Uniqlo, it owns several other brands, including J Brand, Comptoir des Cotonniers, GU, Princesse Tam-Tam, and Theory.

  3. Iwan Wirth - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Iwan_Wirth

    Iwan Wirth was born in 1970 [2] and spent his early life in St. Gallen, Switzerland, [3] where his father was an architect and his mother was a schoolteacher. [4] Wirth opened a commercial gallery in 1986 at the age of sixteen, [5] and began working as a private dealer in Zurich in 1990.

  4. List of largest retail companies - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_largest_retail...

    Companies are ordered by net income from retail operations in millions of US Dollars in FY 2020. [1] Carrefour S.A. was excluded from 2020's report at the company’s request. The list does not include Wakefern Food Corporation with revenue of US$16.3 billion in 2017. [2]

  5. List of largest companies in the United States by revenue

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_largest_companies...

    This list comprises the largest companies currently in the United States by revenue as of 2024, according to the Fortune 500 tally of companies and Forbes. The Fortune 500 list of companies includes only publicly traded companies, also including tax inversion companies. There are also corporations having foundation in the United States, such as ...

  6. A crisis is hitting your local drugstore. Why the slow demise ...

    www.aol.com/finance/crisis-hitting-local...

    (CVS and Walgreens shares are down about 16% and 48%, respectively, over the past year.) “This is not a happy industry in retail,” says Neil Saunders, a retail analyst for GlobalData.

  7. Franklin Templeton Investments - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Franklin_Templeton_Investments

    The company was founded in 1947 in New York by Rupert H. (Harris) Johnson Sr. (1900–1989), who ran a successful retail brokerage firm from an office on Wall Street. [3] He named the company for American polymath Benjamin Franklin because Franklin espoused frugality and prudence when it came to saving and investing. [4]

  8. What 'secret' loudspeaker codes mean at department stores - AOL

    www.aol.com/news/2010-10-13-what-secret...

    This "code" is one of many innocuous sounding secret codes that. If you've been shopping in a big box retail store you've probably heard an announcement on the loudspeaker such as, "code yellow ...

  9. Nash Finch Company - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nash_Finch_Company

    At the time of its 2013 merger with Spartan Stores, Nash Finch was the second largest publicly traded wholesale food distributor in the United States, in terms of revenue, with $5.21 billion in annual sales; Nash Finch was also a Fortune 500 company.

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