L.L. Bean keeps opening more stores
L.L. Bean plans to open eight stores nationwide in 2026, including its first locations in Alabama and Tennessee, with an additional eight to ten stores planned for 2027. All seven stores opened in 2025, including the retailer's first Florida location, exceeded expectations and are producing strong year-over-year growth. The company is investing over $50 million in a multi-year renovation of its Freeport, Maine flagship store and campus, which is the second most visited tourist destination in Maine. The reimagined flagship will feature an immersive shopping experience, an enlarged trout pond with better accessibility, a doubled-size stream tank with viewing bubbles, a children's play area inspired by summer camps, a dedicated product customization floor, and an expanded outdoor Discovery Park venue.
How real estate intelligence is redefining retail growth
Retailers are expanding again—but with far more discipline. Today, it’s not about opening the most stores, but choosing locations that can truly win. Real estate intelligence is reshaping decisions by tying together customer movement, store performance and financial impact, allowing brands to validate formats faster, negotiate smarter and align real estate strategy with bottom-line results. The retailers who treat data as a daily habit—not a quarterly report—are the ones building portfolios that can flex with consumer behavior and stay future-proof.
Retail roulette: How Trump’s tariffs altered buying
Tariffs under the Trump administration have become so unpredictable that retailers are struggling to keep up, with costs shifting faster than buying teams can plan. Because orders are usually placed months—sometimes nearly a year—in advance, the on-again, off-again tariff changes have disrupted long-standing vendor relationships, forced last-minute capacity bets, and pushed buyers to reorder their entire sourcing strategies. Big names like Best Buy and Ikea have already shifted production away from China, while smaller retailers face far greater pressure as they juggle longer lead times, unreliable suppliers, and tighter holiday deadlines. As experts point out, this volatile trade environment is accelerating a major industry shift: retailers must evolve from lean, efficiency-focused supply chains to more flexible, resilient ones—or risk being left behind.
Ikea profits take a hit from tariffs, affordability effort
IKEA's net profit fell nearly one-third to 1.5 billion euros from 2.2 billion euros in fiscal year 2025, as the company absorbed the impact of U.S. tariffs and rising commodity prices while maintaining lower prices for franchisees and customers. Total revenues remained essentially flat at 26.3 billion euros, with total IKEA sales declining 1% to 44.6 billion euros due to lower wholesale prices introduced in 2024. Despite the profit decline, sales volumes grew 2.6% and store visits increased nearly 2%, reaching 915 million, as the company opened 66 new locations globally. IKEA plans to maintain current wholesale price levels in fiscal 2026 to ensure stability and affordability despite continued pressure on profitability.
October Retail Sales Show Strong Growth
Retail sales increased 0.6% month-over-month and 5% year-over-year in October, with core retail sales up 4.9% annually. The National Retail Federation attributed the solid performance to wage growth outpacing inflation, historically low unemployment, and wealth effects from strong stock market valuations. Digital sales rose 22.39% year-over-year, while apparel and accessories increased 7.89%, and sporting goods rose 7.19%. Talk Business Furniture and home furnishings declined 1.7%, and building and garden supply sales dropped 8.52% compared to the previous year.
Sonder Abruptly Shuts Down After Marriott Exits Partnership
Short-term rental company Sonder abruptly ceased operations after Marriott terminated its licensing agreement on November 9, leaving guests with immediate eviction notices. CBS News Guests received emails instructing them to vacate properties immediately, with some discovering their belongings packed and left in hallways. The company announced it would file for Chapter 7 bankruptcy to liquidate U.S. assets, citing significant delays and challenges in integrating with Marriott's technology systems, which resulted in unexpected costs and declining revenue from the Bonvoy reservation system.
Commercial real estate deals are slowing, but these two beleaguered sectors are shining
After a post-pandemic rebound, commercial real estate dealmaking has slowed sharply in 2025 — though high-quality assets continue to attract investor capital. Moody’s data shows total CRE deal value up just 5% year-over-year, with a clear flight to quality driving more large-scale transactions. Office properties are seeing renewed interest as tech giants like Apple, Nvidia, and Microsoft snap up discounted campuses, while open-air retail centers are emerging as a surprise winner, drawing nearly half a billion dollars in September investments. Meanwhile, hotels are struggling, with deal value plunging 30% amid weak business travel. Despite uncertainty, deep-pocketed investors are still betting on resilient, well-located assets that can weather today’s economic turbulence.
The rise of electronic shelf labels in retail
Electronic shelf labels (ESLs) are transforming from pilot projects into a retail must-have, with major players like Walmart, Target, and Aldi leading the charge in U.S. adoption. These digital price tags help retailers keep pricing accurate, react instantly to market shifts, and cut waste from millions of paper tags. Despite some lawmakers’ concerns about surge pricing, studies show ESLs actually promote more frequent discounts and transparency. Beyond pricing, ESLs boost efficiency, sustainability, and customer trust — helping stores operate smarter and greener in a competitive, tariff-challenged market. As retail evolves, ESLs aren’t just tech upgrades — they’re the new backbone of modern, customer-first retail operations.




