Sears Canada posts loss as sales fall 15.6 percent
(Reuters) - Department store operator Sears Canada Inc (Toronto:SCC.TO - News) (NasdaqGS:SRSC - News) reported a quarterly loss, compared with a year-earlier profit, hurt by a 15.6 percent fall in sales.
The company said same-store sales fell 5.5 percent as traffic for big-ticket items such as major appliances fell due to termination of a credit card agreement and lower-than-expected sales of new merchandise launched in spring.
Bank of Nova Scotia (Toronto:BNS.TO - News) said in October it would buy JPMorgan & Chase Co's (NYSE:JPM - News) Canadian credit card portfolio associated with Sears Canada.
Sears Canada, hit by increasing competition from U.S. retail giants such as Wal-Mart Stores Inc (NYSE:WMT - News), has been shutting down stores and cutting jobs.
The company said it cut C$128 million in costs for the first half of this year and said it was planning cost cuts at the higher end of its previously announced C$127 million-C$155 million forecast.
Sears Canada posted a net loss of C$91.6 million ($71.32 million), or 90 Canadian cents per share, for the second quarter ended July 30, compared with a profit of C$13.5 million, or 13 Canadian cents per share, a year earlier.
The year-earlier quarter included a gain of C$67.2 million as a result of sale-and-leaseback transactions.
Revenue fell to C$648.5 million from C$768.8 million.
(Reporting by Anet Josline Pinto in Bengaluru; Editing by Shounak Dasgupta)