Business
Pruning: Dollar Tree is cutting 1,000 branches

Pruning: Dollar Tree is cutting 1,000 branches

**The buck stops here…**‍

Dollar Tree has announced plans to close 1,000 stores over the next 12 months, after the company revealed a surprise Q4 loss largely stemming from its move to slash the value of subsidiary Family Dollar, the rival it acquired almost 10 years ago.

The iconic chain store — where customers could once browse aisles brimming with sub-$1 bargains, but can now expect to pay up to $5 for some products — has become a “victim of the macro environment”, according to a statement from CEO Rick Dreiling on Wednesday. Even so, the company has also struggled with basic operations, receiving a ~$41m fine over a rodent-infested warehouse just 3 weeks ago.

Store of value

The lion’s share of closures will affect Family Dollar, which Dollar Tree picked up for ~$8.5bn in 2015, following an extended bidding war with Dollar General. Indeed, the parent company plans on closing 600 Family Dollar stores in the first half of this year, followed by a further 370 in the second half, taking the company's total store count below 16,000.

This would be the first time that the Tree’s total location tally has dropped in 3 decades, having added branches every single year since 1994, when they counted just 409 stores across the US and Canada. However, with slumping sales and most prices already forced up to the $1.25 mark ~2 years ago, Dollar Tree’s greenest years might be behind it.

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GM has reportedly rehired more than 100 former Cruise employees, 18 months after shuttering the robotaxi unit

GM has rehired more than 100 employees it let go early last year when it shuttered Cruise, its former robotaxi business, according to reporting by The Information.

The hiring spree, which also includes employees from Nvidia and Uber, is geared toward ramping up GM’s plans for personal-use self-driving vehicles and not robotaxis. The former had been the focus of Cruise, prior to GM shuttering it in 2024.

Reporting last fall revealed that GM was attempting to rehire some former Cruise employees, but the scope of that effort wasn’t clear. More than 1,000 employees were laid off when the automaker scrapped Cruise, which it invested $10 billion into.

Google’s Waymo, Cruise’s former chief rival, is now worth $126 billion after a $16 billion funding round earlier this year. The company says it’s serving 500,000 paid robotaxi rides per week in the US.

Reporting last fall revealed that GM was attempting to rehire some former Cruise employees, but the scope of that effort wasn’t clear. More than 1,000 employees were laid off when the automaker scrapped Cruise, which it invested $10 billion into.

Google’s Waymo, Cruise’s former chief rival, is now worth $126 billion after a $16 billion funding round earlier this year. The company says it’s serving 500,000 paid robotaxi rides per week in the US.

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