| HBC should be $16.00 by end of next week. 
 Great article in the Toronto Star.
 
 ==============
 thestar.com
 
 March 11, 2000 
 Battle of retail giants
 
 The Bay, Sears fight for market dominance in
 department store sector
 
 By Steven Theobald
 Toronto Star Business Reporter
 
 With the old Eaton's chain just a memory, morale is riding
 high at the Bay these days.
 
 ``This is a good time to be here,' said Bay president Marc
 Chouinard.
 
 ``We have momentum on our side,' he added, referring to
 robust fourth-quarter earnings made public Thursday.
 
 Not that Paul Walters, chief executive of rival Sears Canada
 Inc., took much notice.
 
 ``To be honest, I don't even look at what the Bay is doing. I
 focus on what my customers want.'
 
 Chouinard is just as quick to brush aside the thought of
 confrontation.
 
 ``I would say we are not going head-to-head.'
 
 `I don't even look at what
 the Bay is doing. I focus on
 what my customers want . .
 . The future lies with
 understanding the buying
 habits of individual
 customers.'
 - Paul Walters
 CEO of Sears Canada Inc.
 
 But make no mistake, Canada's two remaining full-line
 department store chains know who the enemy is. So get
 ready to be wooed like never before.
 
 When sizing up the showdown, Sears Canada has got
 bullets in all six cylinders.
 
 The company, which was struggling in the first half of the
 1990s, has chalked up three consecutive years of stellar
 performance.
 
 On top of that, Walters grabbed the core assets of Eaton's,
 paying less than $80 million and pocketing roughly $175
 million in tax savings.
 
 Sears' success comes down to two things: revamping the
 chain just in time for the spending boom and building an
 unparalleled multi-channel retail network, including
 stand-alone furniture stores, catalogues and the Internet.
 
 ``They have managed to define themselves as the definitive
 department store in the minds of average Canadians,' said
 retail consultant Anthony Stokan of Toronto-based Anthony
 Russell.
 
 Meanwhile, the Bay was busy duking it out with Eaton's
 over who could sell the most merchandise at the biggest
 discounts. The Bay also lost its status as a one-stop
 shopping destination, dropping many product categories in
 favour of more fashion goods and apparel.
 
 On the plus side, the tired management ranks have been
 gutted by Hudson's Bay Co. chief executive George Heller.
 
 Importantly, the company is in much better debt, cash-flow
 and inventory positions than a year ago.
 
 The Bay has also started listening to the retail gurus
 preaching that the lack of time, not price, is the determining
 factor for shoppers.
 
 A couple of ``express' Bay stores, featuring a centralized
 cash system, were tested in past few months in the GTA.
 As many as 35 suburban stores will be converted to
 centralized cashiers this year.
 
 But when it comes to knowing your customer, the Bay has
 a long way to go to catch up with database savvy Sears,
 which boasts of 4 million catalogue customers and 8.9
 million credit card holders.
 
 ``The future lies with understanding the buying habits of
 individual customers,' said Walters, noting at 62 per cent of
 his total sales - about $6 billion last year - were made using
 the Sears card.
 
 While the Bay only has 2.3 million card holders, Chouinard
 said he's considering doing cross marketing with Zellers,
 including offering Club Z points as an alternative to Air
 Miles.
 
 ``There is so much cross-shopping, it's phenomenal,' he
 said. ``A Zellers customer probably buys their cosmetics
 with us and a Bay customer probably buys their health and
 beauty aids at Zellers.'
 
 Despite the Bay's notion that its core customers are baby
 boomer-run households, a lot of their customers also shop
 at Sears, particularly for home furnishings and hardware.
 
 When it comes to higher-end fashion labels, Sears is
 threatening to take a big chunk of business away from the
 big downtown Bay stores once Sears relaunches the
 Eaton's banner.
 
 The seven Eaton's stores bought by Sears took in $406
 million in 1998 - their last full year of operation - including
 $151 million at the Toronto Eaton Centre.
 
 Dave Brodie, a retail analyst with CIBC World Markets,
 expects the seven stores to have $600 million in annual
 sales.
 
 ``In my mind they will do well, and the costs of getting into
 it are modest.'
 
 Deep pockets and Walters' proven merchandising skills
 bode well for Eaton's rebirth.
 
 Not everyone is convinced.
 
 Gordon Harris, a Vancouver-based retail consultant, is one
 of a number of observers who think the relaunch of the
 Eaton's banner may be Sears' Achilles heel.
 
 ``The Bay could be a threat to the new Eaton's,' he said.
 ``They have the experience.'
 
 If Chouinard is nervous about a worthy adversary taking
 bites out of his flagship store sales, he's trying not to show
 it.
 
 ``Running big downtown stores is not something anyone
 can pick up and do overnight,' he said, adding that
 intensive staff training sessions will start in three months to
 prepare for Eaton's fall opening.
 
 Walters has no doubt about the strategy.
 
 ``You won't be able to convince people about the strategy
 until it's there for everyone to see,' he said.
 
 ``These stores were profitable as Eaton's, and how we are
 going to execute is going to be drastically different than
 before.'
 
 After the dust settles, people will see that there is room in
 Canada for both department store chains, said George
 Hartman, a retail analyst with Dundee Securities Corp.
 
 ``They both can survive and live quite profitably. If they
 mess up it's their problem.'
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