In this video we go over the rise and fall of retail chain JC Penny including hedge fund manager Bill Ackman's failed attempt to save the company.
Support us on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/WallStreetMillennial
Check out our new website: http://wallstreetmillennial.com/
Join our free Discord Server: https://discord.gg/VBd6cA4jUt
Twitter: https://twitter.com/MillennialWall
Music courtesy of:
––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––
Buddha by Kontekst https://soundcloud.com/kontekstmusic
Creative Commons — Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported — CC BY-SA 3.0
Free Download / Stream: http://bit.ly/2Pe7mBN
Music promoted by Audio Library https://youtu.be/b6jK2t3lcRs
––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––

What's up guys and welcome back to wall street millennial on this channel, we cover everything related to stocks and investing in today's video we're going to talk about one of the most dramatic declines in recent retail history. Since the rise of online retailer, amazon and big box walmart before that older department stores and retailers have declined even 20th century superpowers, like sears once admired not unlike amazon, is today have been reduced to penny stocks trading over the counter. But jcpenney was once one of the most admired american companies in the retail space. There was a time when you would find it difficult to find someone who had never shopped in one before jcpenney undeniably had, and even to this day has a deeply entrenched brand name.

That hundreds of millions of consumers recognize even hedge fund titan bill ackman believed in the company enough, as recently as 2013, to invest hundreds of millions of dollars of his fund's money. In this video we're going to talk about jcpenney's legacy and how, after more than a century of glory, it finally succumbed to the inevitable death of retail jcpenney was started by james cash penny in the early 20th century, penny was born in missouri and started his career Working a working-class job at a local retailer, he later started his own store in wyoming selling various dry goods. It was called the golden rule store. He founded it on the principle of the so-called golden rule and would later attribute his success to this principle.

His business venture was immediately successful, becoming one of the only suppliers of essential goods to customers in the mountain states. Within 10 years, penny had several dozen stores as the business expanded. He adopted the name jcpenney for all of his stores. Throughout the middle of the 20th century, jcpenney exploded, they issued their own credit card, expanded to all 50 states and started their own catalog to compete with sears.

They expanded their product line to include things like appliances, tools, auto shops and even experience based products like beauty, salons and restaurants. After 70 years in business, james cash penny died in 1971.. He left an estate worth 35 million dollars which, in today's dollars is more than half a billion. He left most of his fortunes to his wife, kids and various philanthropies, but his superpower franchise would keep growing for some time after his death in the 70s and 80s.

The retail space became more and more crowded specialty retailers that focused on single types of products such as outdoor and sports equipment, started challenging jcpenney's model of selling everything under the sun in the 80s jcpenney sold off many of its non-core. Businesses such as its automotive and appliance businesses in their place, they refocus on their core retail business. They started selling online as early as 1983.. Jcpenney also wanted to break into the higher end space of retail.

They secured some high-profile high-end fashion designers to sign on exclusive contracts with jcpenney up until that point, jcpenney was only known for mid-level merchandise. At that time, the retail space was becoming fiercely competitive. Old established stores like sears and jcpenney were being challenged by newer, more innovative stores like walmart and kmart. These new competitors appealed more to the younger generations who, with each passing year and decade, made up a larger portion of the population.
In fact, sam walton, the founder of walmart, even worked for jcpenney before starting his own competitor. The clean, modern, look and feel of the newer stores, along with the lower prices or more engaging shopping experiences, pulled customers away from jcpenney by the year 2000. Jcpenney was clearly past its peak and started liquidating its worst performing stores. The financial crisis of 2008 was a major permanent blow to jcpenney.

Shoppers found little reason to continue shopping at jcpenney when cheaper stores like walmart and target existed. The quality and perception of jcpenney had faded and they were unable to retain customers. After 2008, their profit margins shrunk to razor thin levels in 2013, their revenue tanked, bringing their net income into negative territory. The blue line shows their revenue each quarter since 2007, and the green line shows their net income.

You can explore financial charts like these on our new website at wallstreetmillennial.com. Retail is usually a business that can benefit tremendously from operating leverage. In other words, there are massive fixed costs in setting up supply chains, deals with designers, advertising campaigns etc, but after those fixed costs are paid for, each additional store contributes revenue. That largely goes straight to the bottom line.

The problem is that, when existing stores are closing, instead of new stores, opening the opposite happens where a franchise that was once profitable quickly becomes massively unprofitable. That is what happened with jcpenney, who crossed the line into unprofitability around 2011 when their earnings per share troughed at negative 2.66 in a single quarter around this time it was revealed that their workforce lacked focus and motivation. Cfo michael kramer admitted that up to a third of all company headquarters, internet bandwidth was in fact being used by employees watching youtube during work hours. Jcpenney then took enormous cost cutting measures, including laying off sixteen hundred employees.

This was able to stop the bleeding to some extent around that same time, bill ackman, the founder of pershing square, purchased. An 18 stake in jcpenney ackman is an activist investor who likes initiating changes in the companies i invest in. He thought that jcpenney was a company that still had brand value but was just mismanaged in lacks direction with the right leadership. He believed that jcpenney could reinvent itself and take back market share.
Ackman recruited ron johnson to become ceo of jcpenney ron johnson, designed the apple store, which is possibly the most successful store in retail history. Convincing johnson to come to jcpenney was seen as a major success for ackman and the company and jcpenney shares temporarily rebounded johnson, immediately overhauled the company's strategy. Up until that point, jcpenney had relied on steep discounting to retain customers. In reality, they only sold very few items at full price.

Instead, attracting customers by offering store-wide discounts, coupons and other pricing gimmicks to give customers the feeling that they are getting a bargain ron johnson thought that this model did not make sense and that it was better to just price merchandise at levels that they expected to sell Them at instead of listing a pair of pants at 50 and then eventually selling it for 20. After multiple discounts, they would instead list it at 20 to start and get rid of. The discounts. Johnson also started marking prices at whole numbers instead of numbers ending with 99 cents.

He hoped that this would simplify the store and refocus jcpenney's shopping experience, johnson decided to roll out these changes nationwide and it was a flop instead of attracting new customers and simplifying the shopping experience like he hoped getting rid of the deep discounts in coupons, lost customers, People just forgot about jcpenney when they stopped seeing their huge sales and couldn't justify paying full price for their merchandise, given the quality and fading brand perception. After just one and a half years, ron johnson was fired and replaced by mike ullman bill. Ackman also lost faith in the company's potential for a turnaround. In 2013, he sold his entire stake in jcpenney for a loss of hundreds of millions of dollars.

The new ceo returned to jcpenney's original model of promotional strategies and also refocused on reducing losses due to theft. In stores, but these measures ultimately failed to rejuvenate the company's dying brand throughout the 2010s, the most that jcpenney could do was cut its own cost as its revenues compressed year after year. They closed more stores and laid off more employees, as they liquidated their stores. The size of the company, as measured by their assets decreased and their shareholders equity shrank.

They were forced to take out more debt to finance their operations. In 2020, the coven 19 pandemic put the last nail in the coffin for the company in may. They filed for chapter 11 bankruptcy protection and closed hundreds of additional stores, their remaining assets were purchased by brookfield property partners in simon property group later that year, for less than one billion dollars and their stock was de-listed. Jcpenney has gone through more than its fair share of ups and downs throughout its 120 year history.
It was once a giant in retail, especially in certain areas of the us, but the rise of more attractive. Mid-Scale retailers reduced their brand perception and competitors like walmart, undercut them on price, although they were early to build. An ecommerce business amazon quickly proved to be too much to compete with the story of jcpenney shows that even the biggest success stories in business are bound to die eventually, as new generations forget their name and new competitors overtake them. Alright, guys that wraps it up.

For this video, if you enjoyed this content, make sure to smash the like button and subscribe, so you don't miss future content in the meantime. Thank you so much for watching and we'll see in the next one wall, street millennial signing out.

By Stock Chat

where the coffee is hot and so is the chat

25 thoughts on “The rise and fall of jc penney”
  1. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Sentra says:

    Great work dude congrats on 100k. Been here since 2.3k not so long ago. Consistency and quality. Keep it up!

  2. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Ben Randolph says:

    In 1999 at the dawn of my software developer career, I actually had a pre-interview with JC Penney. That is, I met for lunch with one of the consultants out there. They had a pretty nice web development operation at HQ at the time. But you had to wear a suit to work. Also, I was told my long hair was a no-go. I passed on the opportunity for those reasons. See? JC Penney would be a powerhouse today had they just hired me!

  3. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Val A. says:

    To Bad I Bought Most Of Our Household Appliances at Jc Penney. One of my first credit cars was from Jc Penney

  4. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Taylor Griffith says:

    I got my engagement ring through JCPenney, we are having the ring sized through them but they have had it weeks longer than they should have. We're getting really annoyed.

  5. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Small Fry says:

    You talk about the fall of JC Penney as if it were mostly the cause of a few bad business decisions. However, the more I look at data and the lasting effects of the 2008 great recession (I'm starting to believe it was actually a great depression), I think that too was a contributor to it's failure. Yes, you are spot on about the coupons vs full price. But fundamentally, the consumer is broke and the economy never fully recovered. The fear of another 2008 event is fueling fear in consumers which (to me) contributing to the decline in retail and everything in general. Nice channel!

  6. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars I says:

    It would still work if JC Penney opened a small store again, it would do extraordinary well better than any other retail store. Why?, Consumers loved shopping at their store..period.

  7. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars laken1804 says:

    When you have a retail business see what young people are doing, where they are going. What they want.
    You can get a single product at wholesale price on Alibaba nowadays, even when not buying wholesale. And a lot of stores have conceited employees.

  8. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars laken1804 says:

    Sears and JC Penney should not be compared to Target and Walmart. You can get groceries at Walmart. The first two never had groceries. They should say why is Macy's doing better?

  9. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Patricia Jimenez says:

    Me da pena cuando algo tan icónico y nacional se pierde, aveces x la mala administración y los empleados, también pueden arruinar una empresa, lo digo x experiencia. Es una pena k compañías, realmente americanas cierren sus puertas, ya el valor, respeto y lealtad se a perdido.

  10. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Ottoman Beats says:

    GOOD, start making shit that actually fits and have more variety. I dont feel bad for any of these stores losing to "amazon"

  11. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Kevin COVINGTON says:

    JC PENNY DIED The day they dropped Ellen Degenerous over a political issue. Three years later GONE!

  12. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Athaporn MCorp Review says:

    Sam Walton sure learnt a thing or two or built a better mousetrap. Juz go bankrupt la…jc will become a penny stock

  13. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Mark Douglas says:

    Johnson also discontinued basic clothing products that people (like me) had bought for decades. I’ve never found an equivalent replacement. Johnson destroyed the company.

  14. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Ditto Head says:

    We still have our JCPenneys but it’s still expensive. When you price ending in .97 you couldn’t use a coupon on one item, always had to buy more. Their stuff just looks old and my teens never liked Arizona, even their Nike line. Too little, too late. I usually buy clearance items only.

  15. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Tracy McCormick says:

    JCPenney,a good place to shop.A terrible place to work!!!I worked there for15years They don't give a shit about their employees!!!

  16. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Yim B says:

    "They started selling online as early as 1983". Really…so a few months after the internet entered the public domain, JC Penney opened an online store so they could sell T-shirts to a handful of tech geeks at universities. Sure they did…

  17. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Mike Starks says:

    macy's, dillards, etc…they are all doomed. ecommerce, zoom, etc will kill almost all bricks and mortar retail and office work. landlords got too greedy and prices had to absorb overpriced rent.

  18. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars michael boultinghouse says:

    online Penney's is great. a lot cheaper that Kohl's and I just use their brick and mortar store for refunds

  19. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Richard Santiago says:

    I have shopped in jcpenny since I was kids . They have cheap quality products at high price.they have big sale on weekends drawn big crowds before Ron Johnson.

  20. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Gary Patton says:

    I'm truly passionate about going to Harbor Freight I just like going there and I like buying their things. Everything else I buy on Amazon even food sometimes.

  21. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Drew Xavier says:

    Ron Johnson was the true beggining of the end for JC Penny, their website for online sales was atrocious and definitely not user friendly. The employees bad attitude, not all but most, and lack of professionalism was a factor in the lack of customers entering through their doors but definitely Ron eliminating what made JC Penny attractive to bargain shoppers started the tail spin towards the final chapter.

  22. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Bobb Bobb says:

    Ackman hired Johnson who wanted to take every store and convert it to a shop within a store concept. In the infamous investor meeting on 2/1/12, Johnson bragged that each store would be under construction for the next two years. Ignoring the CapEx limitations, who wants to shop in a store that is constantly under construction for two years? Both Ackman and Johnson are fools.

  23. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars J . says:

    Sears died after they stop having a catalog. Right around the time computer sales started. Penney’s down fall started when they bought That drug company, then down again when they bought Eckerds…..everyone knows what happened to them. They got that Apple guy and he almost brought Penney’s to their knees. Penney’s stock used to be $78.00 a share, now is it even a dollar? I sold all my stock at $52.00…..they need to stop hiring CEOs with no real retail experience. Selling a phone doesn’t count.

  24. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Gregory Ambres says:

    My mama would call it it "J. C. Pennée" so that it wouldn't sound like a poor-peoples' shop 🤣

  25. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars O_Mondi says:

    I realy appreciate your content. Your POV is also very intriguing with a very personal feel , it's like we know each other and are brainstorming together I have a very visual thought process haha . All this is weird Haha oh well …
    Please do a video concerning a baked goods food processing company that's killing it . I have a couple bakerys we all about that guy cake , I'm 25 in an emerging market, there's very large unexploited markets. big uncharted green grounds , its urbanizing at an incredible rate . I'm graduating in a year and have really been thinking about the food processing sector and would like to explore it but with big long term objectives from the start setting up the right foundations to really scale with a dominant regional presence .there's still space for giants to be born here . My background is in finance and Economics, my mind has been more focused on investing and funds . The sme started as a way to generate me some cashflow with out much serious growth plans but when you see something you can un see it . So please show us something about processing. I just like seeing how others played thirs moves and strategies , to help me make better decisions…. otherwise I love the channel. Day 1 subscriber . Keep doing your thing

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.