Sears Agrees To Sell Craftsman Tool Brand At Ace Hardware
February 19 2010 - 7:28PM
Dow Jones News
Sears Holdings Corp. (SHLD) has agreed to sell its popular
Craftsman tool brand through Ace Hardware stores, as the company
turns again to outsiders to help grow its sales.
Sears and Ace Hardware Corp., the largest retailer-owned
cooperative in the hardware industry by sales, said Friday they'll
start the partnership with 100 Ace stores selling about 10% of the
total Craftsman line in May. The move confirms months of
speculation that Sears might turn to an outside hardware or
home-improvement chain to help sell the popular line of hand tools,
portable power tools and tool storage as sales at Sears namesake
department stores have continued to struggle.
Guenther Trieb, president of Sears Brands Management Corp., said
in an interview that Sears will decide later whether to roll out
the store-within-a-store Craftsman offering to all 4,500 Ace
stores. But all stores in June will be allowed to sell a smaller
grouping of Craftsman tools for a Father's Day promotion.
"We believe it is a great strategic complement to our current
format," Trieb said. "It is a strategic move to drive the overall
value of the brand."
Ace currently sells tools made by Stanley Works (SWK) and by
Black & Decker Corp. (BDK), two companies that are in the
process of merging.
Sears roughly 900 department stores will remain the
"headquarters" for sales of Craftsman, which has some 6,000
stock-keeping units, Trieb said. And the Ace stores will also
complement Craftsman's presence in about 80 Orchard Supply Hardware
stores and 110 Sears Hardware Stores in off-mall locations, he
said.
Sears declined to discuss Craftsman's recent business trends but
said the line remains the market leader "by far," Trieb said.
With its lifetime guarantee, Craftsman tools have long been
popular in the U.S.
Popular Mechanics magazine readers last year named Craftsman as
their favorite hand-tool brand, and market-research firm Harris
Interactive's 2009 brand-equity ranking listed Craftsman as tops
for tools.
Earlier this week, Sears said it will allow franchisees to open
Sears Auto Centers. And on Feb. 11, the company's brand-management
business announced a trademark licensing deal with a manufacturer
to sell DieHard battery chargers, jump starters and other
accessories to outside retailers.
Sears has said it won't rule anything out with respect to
expanding sales of other well known brands, including Kenmore
appliances.
"We are doing these move because we see great strategic
opportunity, and we currently don't have any specific plans for
Kenmore," Trieb said Friday.
Shares of Sears Holding traded down 0.1% at $94.99 in late
trading Friday. Shares of Stanley Works closed down 0.8% at $55.92,
while Black & Decker ended regular trading down 1% at
$70.62.
Analysts have said Sears, which reports fourth-quarter results
Tuesday, must do something to revitalize sales. Sales trends in the
department stores weakened through the first two months of the Jan.
30-ended fourth quarter, according to a Sears update Jan. 7.
Comparable-store sales were running at a 6% decrease, on top of a
10.7% decline a year ago and compared with a 4.6% drop in the third
quarter.
Sears said tools and automotive sales had been stronger, but
large-ticket hardline categories offset the increases.
For its part, Ace seems like it could use a boost to its tools
business. The cooperative earlier this week said domestic
merchandise sales were most hurt by declines in the tools and
electrical categories.
The cooperative reported net income of $95.7 million for the
Jan. 2-ended fiscal year, an 11.5% increase. Full-year revenue fell
10.4% to $3.5 billion.
-By Mary Ellen Lloyd, Dow Jones Newswires, 704-948-9145;
maryellen.lloyd@dowjones.com
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