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Dollarama Inc. is a Canadian dollar store retail chain headquartered in Mount Royal, Quebec. [3] Since 2009, it has been Canada's biggest retailer of items for five dollars or less. [ 4 ] Dollarama has over 1400 stores and is active in all of Canada; Ontario has the most stores.
Dollarama; IKEA; Jean Coutu Group; London Drugs; Walmart Canada; Whole Foods Market; Pusateri's (downsized in 2024 to one store location plus one food service outlet) [1] Giant Tiger; M&M Food Market; Hudson's Bay Now including Zellers
Payless ShoeSource Canada — Shoe store; Kmart Canada — Canadian division of US-based parent; Canadian stores sold to Zellers; Knob Hill Farms — grocery store chain in Southern Ontario; Krazy Krazy; Les Ailes de la Mode — department store; Lowe's Canada — Hardware store, now RONA+; Lastman's Bad Boy — Furniture Store
Canada's dollar-store chain Dollarama Inc on Thursday reported quarterly revenue and same-store sales that missed Wall-Street estimates, hurt by a prolonged winter that kept shoppers away from its ...
In July 2009, Loblaw extended its presence in the ethnic retail market with its announced purchase of T&T Supermarket Inc., Canada's largest chain of Asian food stores, for some CA$225 million – 191 million in cash and the rest in preferred shares. Founded in 1993, the 17-store chain, with outlets in British Columbia, Alberta and Ontario ...
Canadian discount chain Dollarama Inc on Thursday reported a 6 percent rise in quarterly profit, as shoppers spent more at its dollar stores. The retailer's comparable store sales for the fourth ...
RONA in Markham, Ontario Former RONA Cashway in Milton, Ontario Rona Home & Garden in Regina, Saskatchewan Réno-Dépôt in Laval, Québec RONA+ in Windsor, Ontario. Rona, Inc. (stylized as RONA) is a Canadian retailer of home improvement and construction products and services, owned by U.S.-based private equity firm Sycamore Partners.
In the early 21st century, Loblaw brought the Superstore banner to Ontario as a response to the introduction of large grocery sections in most Canadian Wal-Mart stores and other department stores, and as a pre-emptive strike against any plans by Wal-Mart to bring its "Supercenter" format to Canada. Originally, Ontario stores were co-branded ...