• 'This isn't a random shoplifter anymore': Home Depot CEO warns retail t

    From useapen@21:1/5 to All on Tue Sep 12 03:32:54 2023
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    Retail giants have always had to deal with petty theft, but a growing
    trend of organized retail crime is now not just eating into company
    profits, it’s threatening the safety of workers.

    “It’s a big problem for retail,” Home Depot (NYSE:HD) CEO Ted Decker told CNBC’s Squawk Box. “This isn’t the random shoplifter anymore.”

    The home improvement retailer has faced the loss of two employees — Gary
    Rasor, 83, and Blake Mohs, 26 — who were killed during separate theft
    incidents over the past year.

    Just last month, the Miami Herald reported a Florida pastor was arrested
    and is accused of organizing the theft of roughly $1.4 million worth of
    goods from numerous Home Depot locations in the state.

    Organized retail crime and theft are growing in both scope and complexity across the country, according to a study from the National Retail
    Federation (NRF) — to the extent that former Home Depot CEO Bob Nardelli recently described it as an “epidemic … spreading faster than COVID.” The
    NRF also estimates theft is costing the retail industry about $100
    billion.

    What’s behind this alarming trend?
    Theft at Home Depot stores has been “growing double-digit year over year,”
    the retailer’s VP of asset protection, Scott Glenn, recently told ABC
    News.

    “More and more we’re seeing the risk being brought into the stores, and
    people being hurt or people even being killed in many cases because these folks, they just don’t care about the consequence,” Glenn said.

    Home Depot isn’t alone in experiencing an uptick in organized retail
    crime, which the National Retail Federation defines as the large-scale
    theft of retail merchandise with the intent to resell the items for
    financial gain.

    About 70% of retailers believe the threat of organized retail crime has increased over the past five years, according to the 2022 National Retail Security Survey.

    To reduce the risk of theft and other crimes in its stores, Home Depot has started locking up high-value items, some of which Decker says may
    surprise customers.

    “They’re not all big — they’re not all power tools and generators. You can
    have a circuit breaker — [worth] $50, $60, $80 — those are all high-theft items.”

    When asked if Home Depot would have to shutter certain stores — following
    the footsteps of other retail giants — the CEO says the retailer has so
    far managed to avoid that.

    However, Decker says the company is increasingly concerned over the safety
    of their employees and customers. As a result, they’ve invested more in security guards, more lighting in their parking lots and recording towers.

    “It’s not a place in retail that many of us thought we would be,” he said.

    Read more: How can I stop the pain and make money in this nightmarish
    market? Here's 1 simple way you can protect your nest egg

    Avoiding stolen goods online
    When it comes to organized retail crime, “a lot of this product is [re-
    sold] on online marketplaces,” Decker said.

    To counter this, the retail giant has been working with local, state and federal governments to help them understand the problem and come up with a viable solution.

    Late last year, Congress passed the INFORM Consumers Act. The act requires online marketplaces to collect, verify and disclose certain financial and identifying information from “high-volume third-party sellers” — those
    with more than 200 transactions and $5,000 in revenue in a 12-month
    period.

    INFORM Consumers, which took effect June 27, aims to increase the
    transparency of online transactions, while also deterring criminals from
    using online marketplaces to sell stolen, counterfeit or unsafe items.

    Decker said he’s “super happy” the bill passed as “it’s going to make
    those marketplaces vet their sellers.”

    In the meantime, the big-name retailer must continue “to manage” its theft challenges and cope with the “pressure on [its] gross margin,” the CEO
    added.

    https://finance.yahoo.com/news/were-investing-more-security-guards- 133000754.html

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