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Foot Locker

Foot Locker, Inc. is an American sportswear and footwear retailer, with its headquarters in Midtown Manhattan, New York City,[4] and operating in over 40 countries.

Foot Locker, Inc.
Formerly
  • Woolworth Co. (1988–1997)
  • Venator Group (1997–2001)
Company typePublic
IndustryClothing
PredecessorF. W. Woolworth Company
FoundedSeptember 12, 1974; 49 years ago (1974-09-12)
City of Industry, California, U.S.
FoundersF. W. Woolworth and Santiago Lopez
Headquarters330 West 34th Street,
New York City
,
U.S.
Number of locations
3,129 stores
Area served
Worldwide
Key people
Brands
  • Foot Locker
  • Kids Foot Locker
  • Lady Foot Locker
  • House Of Hoops
  • Footaction
  • Runner's Point
  • Sidestep
Revenue US$8.0 billion (2020)[1]
US$659 million (2020)[2]
US$491 million (2020)[2]
Total assets US$6.6 billion (2020)[2]
Total equity US$2.519 billion (2017)[2]
Number of employees
32,175[3] (2017)
Websitefootlocker.com

Although established in 1974, and founded as a separate company in 1988, Foot Locker's roots date to 1879, as it is a successor corporation to the F. W. Woolworth Company (“Woolworth's”), which changed its name to Foot Locker in 2001, as many of its freestanding stores were Kinney Shoes and Woolworth's locations.[5] The company operates the eponymous “Foot Locker” chain of athletic footwear retail outlets (along with “Kids Foot Locker” and “Lady Foot Locker” stores), and other athletic-based divisions including Champs Sports, Footaction USA, House of Hoops, and Eastbay/Footlocker.com, which owns the rights to Final-Score. The company is also famous for its employees' uniforms at its flagship Foot Locker chain, resembling those of referees.

Foot Locker located inside Southern Park Mall, Boardman, Ohio.

According to the company's filings with the SEC, as of January 2017, Foot Locker, Inc. had 3,363 primarily mall-based stores in the United States, Canada, Europe, and Asia. Nearly 70% of its products are from Nike.[6]

History edit

In 1963, the F. W. Woolworth Company purchased the Kinney Shoe Corporation and operated it as a subsidiary. In the 1960s, Kinney branched into specialty shoe stores, including Stylco in 1967, Susie Casuals in 1968, and Foot Locker on September 12, 1974. The first Foot Locker opened in the Puente Hills Mall in City of Industry, California.[7] Woolworth also diversified its portfolio of specialty stores in the 1980s, including Afterthoughts, Northern Reflections, Rx Place, and Champs Sports. By 1989, the company pursued an aggressive strategy of multiple specialty store formats targeted at enclosed shopping malls. The idea was that if a particular concept failed at a given mall, the company could quickly replace it with a different concept. The company aimed for ten stores in each of the country's major shopping malls, but this never came to pass as Woolworth never developed that many successful specialty store formats.

In 1988, the F.W. Woolworth Company incorporated a separate company called the Woolworth Corporation in the state of New York. The Woolworth Corporation was responsible for the operations of the Foot Locker stores, among the other specialty chains operated by Woolworth's. One of its first moves was the acquisition of Champs Sports and renaming itself the Woolworth Athletic Group.

During the 1980s and 1990s, the F.W. Woolworth Company's flagship department store chain fell into decline, ultimately culminating in the closure of the last stores operating under the name of Woolworth's in the United States in 1997. Deciding to continue aggressive expansion into the athletic business in the following years, the company acquired Eastbay in 1997, which was the largest athletic catalog retailer in the United States, as well as subsequent purchases of regional storefront retailers Sporting Goods (purchased in 1997) and The Athletic Fitters (purchased in 1998). After 1997, Wal-Mart replaced Woolworth in the Dow Jones average. The Woolworth Corporation remained the parent company of Foot Locker, and in 1998 it changed its name to "Venator Group, Inc." By the 1990s, Foot Locker was responsible for more than 70 percent of Kinney Shoe Corp. sales, while traditional shoe retailer Kinney was in decline. Venator announced shuttering of the remaining Kinney Shoe and Footquarters stores on September 16, 1998.[citation needed]

On February 12, 1999, a federal jury in Austin awarded $341,000 (~$586,579 in 2023) to a former Foot Locker shoe store manager who said the company systematically discriminated against its African American employees by offering more opportunities for promotions to white managers.[8]

 
Foot Locker store, Tower City Center, Cleveland, Ohio
 
A Foot Locker flagship store in Tsim Sha Tsui, Hong Kong
 
Foot Locker in Hillcrest Mall
 
Foot Locker, Southside Wandsworth, London
 
A Foot Locker store at the Bentley Mall, Fairbanks, Alaska

As the "Foot Locker" brand had become the Woolworth/Venator company's top performing line, on November 2, 2001, Venator changed its name to Foot Locker, Inc.[9] On November 19, 2004, Foot Locker announced that its quarterly profit rose 19 percent, helped by stronger sales.[10]

In 2004, Foot Locker acquired the Footaction USA brand and approximately 350 stores from Footstar for $350 million (~$541 million in 2023).[11] On April 14, 2004, Foot Locker Inc. announced that it agreed to buy about 350 Footaction stores from bankrupt Footstar Inc. for $160 million (~$247 million in 2023) to expand in urban areas.[12]

On January 10, 2005, the company announced that Nick Grayston was promoted to President and Chief Executive Officer of its Foot Locker U.S. division, succeeding Tim Finn, who retired from the company.[13]

In 2007, Foot Locker joined with schoolPAX[14] to launch the Foot Locker School Rewards Program,[15] designed to provide charitable donations to schools who sign up and shop at Foot Locker with a custom-coded key tag or school code.

Foot Locker purchased CCS, a skateboarding equipment retailer, from Alloy for $103 million in cash.[16]

In 2011, Foot Locker joined DoSomething.Org for the Foot Locker Scholar Athletes program, which honors high school athletes for demonstrating academic excellence and flexing their hearts on their sports teams and in their communities.

On June 26, 2012, Foot Locker celebrated the 100th anniversary of the first stock offering made by its predecessor, the F. W. Woolworth Company, on the New York Stock Exchange by ringing the Closing Bell for the trading day.

In 2013, the company acquired the German retailer Runners Point Group.[17]

After not meeting corporate expectations, Foot Locker planned to close its CCS unit but sold it to Daddies Board Shop in 2014.[16]

Foot Locker has steadily risen in Fortune 500 rank, from 446 in 2011[18] to 363 in 2018.[19] Foot Locker recorded a record turnover of 7.151 million dollars at the end of the fiscal year 2015.[20]

In 2019, Foot Locker invested $100 million (~$118 million in 2023) in GOAT, an online resale marketplace for sneakers.[21] In 2021, Foot Locker acquired Los Angeles–based athletic retailer WSS and Tokyo-based Atmos.[22] In 2022, Foot Locker announced it would aim to achieve net zero emissions by 2050.[23]

Several Foot Locker stores were damaged in rioting and looting, with two locations destroyed by arson, during the George Floyd protests in Minneapolis–Saint Paul in May 2020.[24][25][26]

A Foot Locker in Ireland was looted in the 2023 Dublin riot.

Stores edit

Americas

  • United States: 871 (contiguous)
    • Puerto Rico: 18
    • US Virgin Islands: 2
    • Guam: 1
  • Canada: 106

Asia-Pacific

  • Australia: 84
  • New Zealand: 15
  • Israel: 74
  • Saudi Arabia: 16
  • United Arab Emirates: 10
  • Kuwait: 10
  • South Korea: 10
  • Bahrain: 4
  • Oman: 3
  • Qatar: 5
  • Lebanon: 2
  • Jordan: 2
  • Indonesia: 6
  • Malaysia: 5
  • Singapore: 7
  • Hong Kong: 6
  • Macau: 2
  • Philippines: 8
  • Vietnam: 1


Europe

  • Italy: 179
  • France: 146
  • Germany: 83
  • Spain: 60
  • United Kingdom: 59
  • Netherlands: 41
  • Belgium: 20
  • Portugal: 16
  • Czech Republic: 10
  • Switzerland: 9
  • Austria: 8
  • Poland: 8
  • Ireland: 7
  • Denmark: 6
  • Hungary: 6
  • Luxembourg: 5
  • Sweden: 5
  • Norway: 5
  • Greece: 3
  • Romania: 3

References edit

  1. ^ "Foot Locker revenue Company Profile". Craft. Retrieved March 30, 2020.
  2. ^ a b c d "Ralph Lauren Corporation 2017 Annual Report (Form 10-K)". sec.gov. U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission. March 2018.
  3. ^ . Fortune. Archived from the original on March 16, 2020. Retrieved December 18, 2018.
  4. ^ "Foot Locker, Inc." Foot Locker. Retrieved on January 22, 2010.
  5. ^ "COMPANY NEWS; VENATOR, ONCE WOOLWORTH, IS NOW FOOT LOCKER". The New York Times. November 2, 2001. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved February 7, 2023.
  6. ^ Bain, Marc (August 18, 2017). "Foot Locker has a Nike problem". Quartz (publication). Retrieved August 18, 2017.
  7. ^ "The Evolution of Foot Locker Stores Over 40 Years". Sole Collector.
  8. ^ "Foot Locker loses race bias suit; African American says he was given".
  9. ^ Venator Group, Inc. Announces Name Change to Foot Locker, Inc., Retail Operations and Construction, November 2, 2001
  10. ^ "Foot Locker Profit Up".
  11. ^ Scardino, Emily. Foot Locker acquires Footaction Stores to step up growth, DSN Retailing Today, May 3, 2004
  12. ^ "Foot Locker to buy about 350 stores".
  13. ^ . Archived from the original on December 29, 2010.
  14. ^ . Archived from the original on November 27, 2010. Retrieved January 29, 2008.
  15. ^ . Archived from the original on April 22, 2009.
  16. ^ a b Stacy Cowley (September 17, 2015). "Picking Up CCS Where Foot Locker Left Off". NYT.
  17. ^ 4-traders (July 10, 2013). "Foot Locker, Inc. : Completes Acquisition of Runners Point Group". 4-Traders. Retrieved August 12, 2013.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  18. ^ Brett Krasnove (May 9, 2014). "Fortune 500 - Fortune". Fortune.
  19. ^ . Fortune. Archived from the original on March 16, 2020. Retrieved December 18, 2018.
  20. ^ Gonzalez-Rodriguez, Angela (March 9, 2015). "Foot Locker, a foot ahead market expectations". FashionUnited. Retrieved June 11, 2015.
  21. ^ "Foot Locker invests $100 million in GOAT Group". TechCrunch. February 7, 2019. Retrieved April 1, 2022.
  22. ^ "Foot Locker to Buy Two Retailers for $1.1 Billion". Reuters. ISSN 0099-9660. Retrieved August 10, 2021.
  23. ^ "Foot Locker, Inc. Announces Ambition to Achieve Net Zero Greenhouse Gas (GHG) Emissions by 2050 or Sooner". ESG News. March 24, 2022. Retrieved April 1, 2022.
  24. ^ Penrod, Josh; Sinner, C.J. (July 13, 2020). "Buildings damaged in Minneapolis, St. Paul after riots". Star Tribune. Retrieved May 5, 2022.
  25. ^ Uren, Adam (June 1, 2020). "A list of the buildings damaged, looted in Minneapolis and St. Paul". Bring Me The News. Retrieved May 5, 2022.
  26. ^ Saavedre-Weis, Isabel (June 4, 2020). "A list of St. Paul businesses damaged during the rioting". St. Paul Pioneer Press. Retrieved May 5, 2022.

External links edit

  • Official website
  • History of Kinney Shoes
  • Business data for Foot Locker, Inc.:
    • Google
    • SEC filings
    • Yahoo!

foot, locker, storage, footlocker, luggage, american, sportswear, footwear, retailer, with, headquarters, midtown, manhattan, york, city, operating, over, countries, formerlywoolworth, 1988, 1997, venator, group, 1997, 2001, company, typepublictraded, asnyse, . For the storage box see Footlocker luggage Foot Locker Inc is an American sportswear and footwear retailer with its headquarters in Midtown Manhattan New York City 4 and operating in over 40 countries Foot Locker Inc FormerlyWoolworth Co 1988 1997 Venator Group 1997 2001 Company typePublicTraded asNYSE FLS amp P 600 componentIndustryClothingPredecessorF W Woolworth CompanyFoundedSeptember 12 1974 49 years ago 1974 09 12 City of Industry California U S FoundersF W Woolworth and Santiago LopezHeadquarters330 West 34th Street New York City U S Number of locations3 129 storesArea servedWorldwideKey peopleMary Dillon President amp CEO BrandsFoot LockerKids Foot LockerLady Foot LockerHouse Of HoopsFootactionRunner s PointSidestepRevenueUS 8 0 billion 2020 1 Operating incomeUS 659 million 2020 2 Net incomeUS 491 million 2020 2 Total assetsUS 6 6 billion 2020 2 Total equityUS 2 519 billion 2017 2 Number of employees32 175 3 2017 Websitefootlocker wbr com Although established in 1974 and founded as a separate company in 1988 Foot Locker s roots date to 1879 as it is a successor corporation to the F W Woolworth Company Woolworth s which changed its name to Foot Locker in 2001 as many of its freestanding stores were Kinney Shoes and Woolworth s locations 5 The company operates the eponymous Foot Locker chain of athletic footwear retail outlets along with Kids Foot Locker and Lady Foot Locker stores and other athletic based divisions including Champs Sports Footaction USA House of Hoops and Eastbay Footlocker com which owns the rights to Final Score The company is also famous for its employees uniforms at its flagship Foot Locker chain resembling those of referees Foot Locker located inside Southern Park Mall Boardman Ohio According to the company s filings with the SEC as of January 2017 Foot Locker Inc had 3 363 primarily mall based stores in the United States Canada Europe and Asia Nearly 70 of its products are from Nike 6 Contents 1 History 2 Stores 3 References 4 External linksHistory editIn 1963 the F W Woolworth Company purchased the Kinney Shoe Corporation and operated it as a subsidiary In the 1960s Kinney branched into specialty shoe stores including Stylco in 1967 Susie Casuals in 1968 and Foot Locker on September 12 1974 The first Foot Locker opened in the Puente Hills Mall in City of Industry California 7 Woolworth also diversified its portfolio of specialty stores in the 1980s including Afterthoughts Northern Reflections Rx Place and Champs Sports By 1989 the company pursued an aggressive strategy of multiple specialty store formats targeted at enclosed shopping malls The idea was that if a particular concept failed at a given mall the company could quickly replace it with a different concept The company aimed for ten stores in each of the country s major shopping malls but this never came to pass as Woolworth never developed that many successful specialty store formats In 1988 the F W Woolworth Company incorporated a separate company called the Woolworth Corporation in the state of New York The Woolworth Corporation was responsible for the operations of the Foot Locker stores among the other specialty chains operated by Woolworth s One of its first moves was the acquisition of Champs Sports and renaming itself the Woolworth Athletic Group During the 1980s and 1990s the F W Woolworth Company s flagship department store chain fell into decline ultimately culminating in the closure of the last stores operating under the name of Woolworth s in the United States in 1997 Deciding to continue aggressive expansion into the athletic business in the following years the company acquired Eastbay in 1997 which was the largest athletic catalog retailer in the United States as well as subsequent purchases of regional storefront retailers Sporting Goods purchased in 1997 and The Athletic Fitters purchased in 1998 After 1997 Wal Mart replaced Woolworth in the Dow Jones average The Woolworth Corporation remained the parent company of Foot Locker and in 1998 it changed its name to Venator Group Inc By the 1990s Foot Locker was responsible for more than 70 percent of Kinney Shoe Corp sales while traditional shoe retailer Kinney was in decline Venator announced shuttering of the remaining Kinney Shoe and Footquarters stores on September 16 1998 citation needed On February 12 1999 a federal jury in Austin awarded 341 000 586 579 in 2023 to a former Foot Locker shoe store manager who said the company systematically discriminated against its African American employees by offering more opportunities for promotions to white managers 8 nbsp Foot Locker store Tower City Center Cleveland Ohio nbsp A Foot Locker flagship store in Tsim Sha Tsui Hong Kong nbsp Foot Locker in Hillcrest Mall nbsp Foot Locker Southside Wandsworth London nbsp A Foot Locker store at the Bentley Mall Fairbanks Alaska As the Foot Locker brand had become the Woolworth Venator company s top performing line on November 2 2001 Venator changed its name to Foot Locker Inc 9 On November 19 2004 Foot Locker announced that its quarterly profit rose 19 percent helped by stronger sales 10 In 2004 Foot Locker acquired the Footaction USA brand and approximately 350 stores from Footstar for 350 million 541 million in 2023 11 On April 14 2004 Foot Locker Inc announced that it agreed to buy about 350 Footaction stores from bankrupt Footstar Inc for 160 million 247 million in 2023 to expand in urban areas 12 On January 10 2005 the company announced that Nick Grayston was promoted to President and Chief Executive Officer of its Foot Locker U S division succeeding Tim Finn who retired from the company 13 In 2007 Foot Locker joined with schoolPAX 14 to launch the Foot Locker School Rewards Program 15 designed to provide charitable donations to schools who sign up and shop at Foot Locker with a custom coded key tag or school code Foot Locker purchased CCS a skateboarding equipment retailer from Alloy for 103 million in cash 16 In 2011 Foot Locker joined DoSomething Org for the Foot Locker Scholar Athletes program which honors high school athletes for demonstrating academic excellence and flexing their hearts on their sports teams and in their communities On June 26 2012 Foot Locker celebrated the 100th anniversary of the first stock offering made by its predecessor the F W Woolworth Company on the New York Stock Exchange by ringing the Closing Bell for the trading day In 2013 the company acquired the German retailer Runners Point Group 17 After not meeting corporate expectations Foot Locker planned to close its CCS unit but sold it to Daddies Board Shop in 2014 16 Foot Locker has steadily risen in Fortune 500 rank from 446 in 2011 18 to 363 in 2018 19 Foot Locker recorded a record turnover of 7 151 million dollars at the end of the fiscal year 2015 20 In 2019 Foot Locker invested 100 million 118 million in 2023 in GOAT an online resale marketplace for sneakers 21 In 2021 Foot Locker acquired Los Angeles based athletic retailer WSS and Tokyo based Atmos 22 In 2022 Foot Locker announced it would aim to achieve net zero emissions by 2050 23 Several Foot Locker stores were damaged in rioting and looting with two locations destroyed by arson during the George Floyd protests in Minneapolis Saint Paul in May 2020 24 25 26 A Foot Locker in Ireland was looted in the 2023 Dublin riot Stores editAmericas United States 871 contiguous Puerto Rico 18 US Virgin Islands 2 Guam 1 Canada 106 Asia Pacific Australia 84 New Zealand 15 Israel 74 Saudi Arabia 16 United Arab Emirates 10 Kuwait 10 South Korea 10 Bahrain 4 Oman 3 Qatar 5 Lebanon 2 Jordan 2 Indonesia 6 Malaysia 5 Singapore 7 Hong Kong 6 Macau 2 Philippines 8 Vietnam 1 Europe Italy 179 France 146 Germany 83 Spain 60 United Kingdom 59 Netherlands 41 Belgium 20 Portugal 16 Czech Republic 10 Switzerland 9 Austria 8 Poland 8 Ireland 7 Denmark 6 Hungary 6 Luxembourg 5 Sweden 5 Norway 5 Greece 3 Romania 3References edit Foot Locker revenue Company Profile Craft Retrieved March 30 2020 a b c d Ralph Lauren Corporation 2017 Annual Report Form 10 K sec gov U S Securities and Exchange Commission March 2018 Foot Locker Fortune Archived from the original on March 16 2020 Retrieved December 18 2018 Foot Locker Inc Foot Locker Retrieved on January 22 2010 COMPANY NEWS VENATOR ONCE WOOLWORTH IS NOW FOOT LOCKER The New York Times November 2 2001 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved February 7 2023 Bain Marc August 18 2017 Foot Locker has a Nike problem Quartz publication Retrieved August 18 2017 The Evolution of Foot Locker Stores Over 40 Years Sole Collector Foot Locker loses race bias suit African American says he was given Venator Group Inc Announces Name Change to Foot Locker Inc Retail Operations and Construction November 2 2001 Foot Locker Profit Up Scardino Emily Foot Locker acquires Footaction Stores to step up growth DSN Retailing Today May 3 2004 Foot Locker to buy about 350 stores FOOT LOCKER INC ANNOUNCES DIVISIONAL MANAGEMENT CHANGES Archived from the original on December 29 2010 School Pax Escola de Negocios Archived from the original on November 27 2010 Retrieved January 29 2008 Foot Locker School Rewards Archived from the original on April 22 2009 a b Stacy Cowley September 17 2015 Picking Up CCS Where Foot Locker Left Off NYT 4 traders July 10 2013 Foot Locker Inc Completes Acquisition of Runners Point Group 4 Traders Retrieved August 12 2013 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint numeric names authors list link Brett Krasnove May 9 2014 Fortune 500 Fortune Fortune Foot Locker Inc Fortune Archived from the original on March 16 2020 Retrieved December 18 2018 Gonzalez Rodriguez Angela March 9 2015 Foot Locker a foot ahead market expectations FashionUnited Retrieved June 11 2015 Foot Locker invests 100 million in GOAT Group TechCrunch February 7 2019 Retrieved April 1 2022 Foot Locker to Buy Two Retailers for 1 1 Billion Reuters ISSN 0099 9660 Retrieved August 10 2021 Foot Locker Inc Announces Ambition to Achieve Net Zero Greenhouse Gas GHG Emissions by 2050 or Sooner ESG News March 24 2022 Retrieved April 1 2022 Penrod Josh Sinner C J July 13 2020 Buildings damaged in Minneapolis St Paul after riots Star Tribune Retrieved May 5 2022 Uren Adam June 1 2020 A list of the buildings damaged looted in Minneapolis and St Paul Bring Me The News Retrieved May 5 2022 Saavedre Weis Isabel June 4 2020 A list of St Paul businesses damaged during the rioting St Paul Pioneer Press Retrieved May 5 2022 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Foot Locker Official website History of Kinney Shoes Business data for Foot Locker Inc GoogleSEC filingsYahoo Portals nbsp New York City nbsp Companies Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Foot Locker amp oldid 1219944954, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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