West 49 Explained

West 49 Inc.
Type:Wholly owned subsidiary
Genre:Clothing, Skateboarding, snowboarding
Foundation:1987 (company)
1995 (retail)
2004 (corporate restructuring)
Former Names:Jumbo Entertainment, Inc. (1987–2004)
Location City:Toronto, Ontario
Location Country:Canada
Location:1203 Caledonia Road
Founder:Sam Baio
Key People:Michael Gold & Michael Roden (CEO)
Revenue: $195.3 million (2006)[1]
Num Employees:> 1,000 employees (2005)[2]
Parent:Independent (1987–2010)
Billabong (2010–2013)
YM Inc. (2013–present)
Owner:Michael Gold
Michael Roden

West 49 Inc., is a Canadian specialty retailer of fashion and apparel, footwear, accessories, and equipment related to the action sports lifestyle. The company was founded in 1987 as Jumbo Entertainment, Inc. to manage the Jumbo Video franchised video stores. It adopted its current name in 2004 following the sale of its entertainment assets to Quebecor.

The retailer, founded in 1995, operates more than 100 stores across the country[1] and is Canada's largest skateboard and snowboard chain. In 2005, it was ranked the 82nd fastest growing company in Canada.[3] [4] West 49 Inc. operates stores under several names: West 49, Billabong, Element Canada, and Amnesia/Arsenic.[1] On November 4, 2013, YM Inc. was confirmed as the new parent company of the retail chain.

History

West 49 was established in 1995 by CEO Sam Baio, who opened three stores in Ontario, Canada. The company has its origins in May 1987 as Jumbo Entertainment, Inc. when it managed the Jumbo Video video store franchise and at one point claimed to be the third-largest player in the Canadian video rental industry. It was well known for offering free popcorn to customers, regardless of whether they rented videos.[5]

Starting in 2001, West 49 sponsored and hosted an annual international skate event, the West 49 Canadian Open. In 2005, Microsoft joined as a co-sponsor.[6] The West 49 Canadian Open is not on the World Cup Skateboarding event schedule for 2007[7] and, as of 2013, is no longer active as an annual skateboarding contest event. As of 2005, the company operated 65 locations in seven provinces, employed nearly 1,000 employees, and reported US$86 million in revenue for the fiscal year ending January 29, 2005.

After financial issues that had been prevalent for many years, the assets of Jumbo Entertainment were purchased by Quebecor in 2004 and the shell company via a reverse takeover renamed the corporate entity to West 49, Inc.[8] [9]

On November 2, 2009, West 49 Ambition Skatecamp premiered on Bite TV.[10] The show follows eight young amateur skateboarders as they vie for a grand prize that includes a profile in SBC Skateboard magazine and a chance to compete in the Maloof Money Cup, a professional skateboarding competition. Along with the placement of the chain's name in the show's title, West 49 is featured in product and logo shots throughout the series.[11]

Two retailers, U.S.-based Zumiez and Australian-based Billabong, engaged in a bidding war to take over the company. In July 2010, Zumiez decided to end its takeover bid, clearing the way for Billabong to acquire West 49.[12] On August 24, 2010, it was announced that shareholders had approved the sale.[13] In September 2013, Billabong started the process of finding a new buyer for the retail chain due to the internal financial problems of the company.[14]

Billabong's sale of the West 49 retail chain was announced on November 4, 2013, with fashion retailer YM Inc. identified as the buyer. West 49 will be sold for approximately CAD$9–11 million after Billabong originally paid CAD$99 million in 2010. The ownership of 92 West 49 retail stores, located across Canada, will be transferred through the deal.[15]

Brands

The chain carries an eponymous brand but mostly sells clothing by Californian brands.[16]

External links

Notes and References

  1. http://www.cnxmarketlink.com/en/releases/archive/February2007/07/c5477.html West 49 Inc. reports fourth quarter sales
  2. http://www.businessedge.ca/article.cfm/newsID/11405.cfm Clothing chains tailor stores to customers
  3. http://www.strategymag.com/articles/magazine/20040823/baio.html The secret of Sam's success
  4. http://www.canadianbusiness.com/rankings/profit100/list.jsp?pageID=profile&profile=82&year=2005&type=profile&listType=P100 Profit 100 2005
  5. http://www.sedar.com/DisplayCompanyDocuments.do?lang=EN&issuerNo=00000427 Jumbo Entertainment (now West 49) 1998 annual report
  6. http://www.transworldsnowboarding.com/twbiz/industrynews/article/0,21214,1094759,00.html Microsoft Canada Teams Up With The West 49 Canadian Open—“Battle Of The Brands”
  7. http://www.wcsk8.com/2007/schedule.lasso World Cup Skateboarding 2007 Event Schedule
  8. https://www.annualreports.com/HostedData/AnnualReportArchive/Q/TSX_QBR_2004.pdf
  9. News: 2004-05-22 . Jumbo selling 105 outlets to Quebecor division . 2024-04-05 . The Globe and Mail . en-CA.
  10. http://www.bite.ca/ambition/ West 49 On Bite TV
  11. http://www.marketingmag.ca/english/news/media/article.jsp?content=20091023_170328_6852 Marketing Magazine
  12. Web site: West 49: Zumiez won't trump Billabong takeover offer. Toronto Sun. Sun Media. July 14, 2010. 2010-07-15.
  13. Web site: West 49 stockholders accept Billabong bid. CBC News. August 24, 2010. 2010-08-26.
  14. News: Billabong hushed up Nixon offload. 23 September 2013. The Australian. 21 September 2013. Rebecca Urban.
  15. Web site: BILLABONG ANNOUNCES DETAILS OF WEST 49 SALE. TransWorld Business. GrindMedia. 5 November 2013. Kailee Bradstreet. 4 November 2013.
  16. Web site: Clothing chains tailor stores to customers . https://web.archive.org/web/20110609031719/http://www.businessedge.ca/archives/article.cfm/clothing-chains-tailor-stores-to-customers-11405 . 9 June 2011. Business Edge. Business Edge. 23 September 2013. Melanie Chambers. 12 August 2005.