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Up until the end of 2023, I lived around the corner from one. It was always busy and then one day I walked over to buy some household supplies and it had suddenly closed. I guess this was why.
Tldr, when your name is 99 Cents Only eventually inflation puts you out of business.
99 Dollas, incoming.
Between the name and the logo colors I assumed for years it was a frozen foods store (there's mostly in strip malls too so I'd drive near but never close enough or slow enough to truly peek), then one day I stepped into one and realized it was an inflation-adjusted dollar store
The corner five & dime is long gone.
Daiso and other 100-yen stores are going strong here in Japan (though now things are 110 yen with tax). It's amazing what kind of fantastic stuff you can get here for $0.72.
Daiso is great in the US, although they've raised prices from $1.25 to $1.75. Still a far better value than Dollar Tree and the like.
It is also interesting when Daiso and other 100-yen shops have stuff that is over 100 yen (usually 300-500 yen). Most of them are the more durable items or ones that would never be good at all if it was sold for 100 yen. Pretty good thinking if you ask me.
> Company executives and industry analysts blamed a series of factors, including the COVID-19 pandemic, escalating theft and crime, competition, big increases in operating costs stemming from high inflation and the expense of servicing its debt … significant minimum-wage jumps.

But you keep reading just a little bit, and you find out this company is a victim of a leveraged buyout:

> The family management team … departing in 2013 The deal — which valued 99 Cents Only Stores at $1.6 billion — saddled the company with a debt load that turned a “conservative balance sheet” into a “highly leveraged capital structure,”

This is absolutely shameless. The owners put the company on incredibly shaky footing, then when a bump in the road comes up, they use it to do politics and refuse to take responsibility?

Is there any way to look out for businesses that have this done to them? I only ever hear about it when the company that's getting hollowed out runs into trouble some months or years later.

I know such buyouts don't always crater the target company in the short term, but it would be nice to have a directory of zombified businesses somewhere so one knows to steer their investment and custom elsewhere.

>do politics and refuse to take responsibility

This is just normal capitalist logic. This is how all corporations would do it if able. See also: 2008’s banking “crisis” among others. None of this is a surprise and pretending it is just enables others to do the same; all while harming the working class and local communities in the name of financial safety for the owners.