Edgars (department store)
Industry | Department store |
---|---|
Founded | 1929 |
Headquarters | , |
Number of locations | 200 (2020) |
Area served | Southern Africa |
Key people | Norman Drieselmann (CEO) |
Products | Fashion and beauty |
Owner | Retailability |
Website | edgars |
Edgars is a Johannesburg-based chain of stores present all over Southern Africa. The department store was previously selling clothing, shoes, homeware & beauty and under new leadership has recently shifted its focus to mass-market fashion and beauty products.
The chain had just around 200 stores, with multiple locations in South Africa, Namibia, Zambia and Botswana as well as in the capital cities of eSwatini (Swaziland), Lesotho, and Ghana when it was sold to Durban based, private fashion company Retailability in 2020.[1]
History
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Edgars was founded in Johannesburg, South Africa in 1929.[2] Its was named after London based Swann and Edgar.[2] Eli Ross opened his first Edgars store in Joubert Street.[2] It relocated to Cape Town in 1929 before returning to Eloff Street, Johannesburg in 1937, now owned by Sydney Press.[2] 1979 saw the company open its new head office called Edgardale and a distribution centre at Crown Mines.[2] South African Breweries would purchase Edcon in 1982.[2]
As part of Edcon, Edgars was included in an ill-fated buyout by U.S. private equity firm Bain Capital Private Equity LP in 2007, which burdened the parent company with debt just as the economy hit a downturn following the global financial crisis.
In 2014 Edgars opened at a new 50,000 square meter shopping centre in Nairobi, Kenya.[3] In 2018 Edgars introduced a new, larger 8,000 square meter store in Fourways Mall in Johannesburg, featuring trees, play areas, a coffee shop, “beauty rooms” where customers can get makeovers, and a section that allows customers to print their own text or images on clothing. Edgars promoted the new prototype store design as "a bit like a town square, a multi-sensory, tree-lined central social space".[4]
In January 2020 it announced it would close its 6,000 square meter store in the upscale Rosebank Mall in Johannesburg suburb Rosebank.[5]
In June 2020 Edcon put the chain up for sale due to economic difficulties stemming from the COVID-19 pandemic.[6] 7 July 2020 it was announced that Edcon has signed an agreement to sell the chain to Durban-based Retailability, which operates 460 stores across Southern Africa and is the owner of brands Legit, which Edcon had sold to Retailability four years prior,[7][8] Beaver Canoe, and Style. Retailability acquired 130 of 194 Edgars stores.[9]
In September of the same year, the company under the new leadership announced to be repositioning Edgars as a mass market brand focused on fashion and beauty products, shifting from its previous homeware portfolio.[10]
Corporate affairs
[edit]Organizational structure
[edit]Edgars Stores Limited is a separate company operating the businesses in Zimbabwe: Edgars and Jet department stores, as well as Edgars Financial Services and Carousel, its Bulawayo-based manufacturing arm.[11]
In Zimbabwe
[edit]Edgars entered the Southern Rhodesia (now Zimbabwe) market in 1946. It was listed on the Southern Rhodesian Stock Exchange, now the Zimbabwe Stock Exchange in 1974. in 2011 it opened a new store in Joina Centre mall in Harare. A store opened in Kadoma in 2019.[12]
There are four Edgars-branded stores in Harare: ZB Centre, Westgate Shopping Centre, and Sam Levy Village in Borrowdale, Robert Mugabe at Angwa, as well as a store in Masvingo.
In 2023, the store left the Zimbabwe Stock Exchange and listed on the Victoria Falls Exchange.
References
[edit]- ^ "Stores", Edgars website, accessed July 7, 2020[permanent dead link]
- ^ a b c d e f Musiker, Naomi (1999). Historical dictionary of Greater Johannesburg. Internet Archive. Lanham, Md.: Scarecrow Press. pp. 113–114. ISBN 978-0-8108-3520-7.
- ^ "SA’s fashion chains Foschini and Edgars to open in Nairobi", Business Daily Africa, 22 January 2013
- ^ Wasserman, Helena (August 27, 2019). "TAKE A LOOK: The first 'new' Edgars store has play areas, personal shoppers and a section where you can print your own t-shirt". Business Insider (South Africa). Retrieved 7 July 2020.
- ^ Mike Simpson, "Edgars Rosebank closure another sign of SA’s changing retail environment", The South African, 13 January 2020
- ^ Bowker, John. "Edgars On Auction Block After 91 Years of South African Trading". Bloomberg.
- ^ "Edcon agrees to sell stake in Edgars to rival". BusinessTech (South Africa). 7 July 2020. Retrieved 7 July 2020.
- ^ Kronje, Jan (7 July 2020). "Pieces of fashion retailer, Edgars, set to be sold off". Fin24. Retrieved 7 July 2020.
- ^ "PROFILE: Norman Drieselmann, the CEO who bought Edgars". BusinessLIVE. Retrieved 2022-04-28.
- ^ "South Africa's Edgars to be repositioned as mass market brand, says new owner". Reuters. 2020-09-22. Retrieved 2022-04-28.
- ^ Edgars (Zimbabwe) official website
- ^ Gorwe, Fradreck (6 December 2019). "Did you know? Edgars store's history". Business Daily (Zimbabwe).