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Giant Tiger Stores Limited is a Canadian discount store chain which operates over 260 stores across Canada. [1] The company's stores operate under the Giant Tiger banner in Alberta, Manitoba, New Brunswick, Nova Scotia, Ontario, Prince Edward Island and Saskatchewan; under the GTExpress and Scott's Discount banners in Ontario and under the Tigre Géant banner in Quebec.
In the same interview, Reid stated that over twenty Giant Tiger franchises are now run by former Walmart employees, most of whom had been attracted by the same franchise system that he had introduced decades earlier. [4] The first Giant Tiger franchise, for a store in Maniwaki, Quebec, was issued in the late 1960s to Jean-Guy Desjardins. The ...
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; Defunct chains
Giant Tiger (31 locations in Western Canada; operated under franchise from Giant Tiger Ltd.) Valu Lots (1 location, Prince Albert, Saskatchewan) Solo Market (1 location) North West Company Fur Marketing (2 locations) Crescent Multi Foods – distributor operating in Saskatchewan, Manitoba, and northern Ontario; Inuit Art Marketing Service
Giant Tiger; Walmart Canada; Whole Foods Market; Costa Rica. Walmart; ... Pisiffik (11 supermarket stores) [2] Spar (11 supermarket stores) [2] Pilersuisoq (64 stores ...
Giant Tiger opened its first store in Ottawa in 1961, modeled on Woolworths. Winners was founded in 1982 in Toronto, and sells off-price brand clothing. Costco entered Canada in 1986. In 1990, the American chain Walmart purchased the Woolco chain in Canada and converted the stores into Walmarts. Dollarama was founded in Quebec in 1992.
Pages in category "Variety stores" The following 53 pages are in this category, out of 53 total. ... Flying Tiger Copenhagen; Fred's; G. Great Canadian Dollar Store; H.
The bread price-fixing scandal in Canada refers to a group of competing bread producers, retailers and supermarket chains reached a secret agreement among themselves to artificially inflate the price of bread at the wholesale and retail levels from late 2001 to 2015 [1] (some sources stated that the price fixing continued into 2017 [2]).