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A "terrible" Christmas season is in store for US chain bookstore Barnes & Noble, according to an internal memo from the retailer's chairman seen by the Wall Street Journal.
In his memo, Leonard Riggio, the retailer's largest shareholder, noted that comparable store sales, a key retail indicator, recently declined for the first time in the retailer's history. "Never in all of the years I've been in business have I seen a worse outlook for the economy," wrote Mr. Riggio. "And never in all my years as a bookseller have I seen a retail climate as poor as the one we are in. Nothing even close."
Barnes & Noble employs an estimated 40,000 people. Barnes & Noble shares are currently trading at $18.55 on the New York Stock Exchange, off a fraction, but down sharply from its 52-week high of $39.52.
The ongoing economic crisis will have a direct impact on the retailer's plans for new growth. Mr. Riggio wrote that the chain will "curtail greatly" the number of new store openings, and that discretionary spending will be cut sharply.