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Uniqlo Opens Manhattan Store, Eyes U.S. Expansion

Uniqlo Manhattan Store

First Posted: 10/14/11 09:13 AM ET Updated: 12/14/11 05:12 AM ET

Fast Retailing Co Ltd's (9983.T) Uniqlo is launching its U.S. expansion this week with the opening of a flagship store in Manhattan that will anchor a global push to rely less on its home market of Japan.

In addition to the Fifth Avenue location, opening on Friday, Uniqlo is also opening a store in New York's Herald Square next week, bringing its U.S. total to three locations. The new stores will be the chain's two biggest.

The retailer's goal is to eventually have 200 stores in the United States and U.S. sales of $10 billion by 2020.

Uniqlo, run by Japanese billionaire Tadashi Yanai, is directly challenging rivals such as Spain's Inditex SA (ITX.MC), Sweden's Hennes & Mauritz AB (HMb.ST) and U.S.-based Gap Inc (GPS.N) with stores a stone's throw away from theirs on Manhattan's major shopping strips.

All these chains are trying to tap the growing market for fashionable clothes, such as cashmere sweaters and lightweight down jackets, at lower prices among U.S. consumers who are likely to have a reduced purchasing power for some time.

"Even people who don't have much money have the same desire to wear something nice," Yanai told Reuters on Thursday through an interpreter.

Its rivals are well established in the United States. H&M opened its first U.S. location in 2000 and now has more than 100. In 2010, it had U.S. sales of some $1.3 billion. Zara has 49 stores here, including seven in New York. Uniqlo has had a single U.S. store, in New York's SoHo district, since 2006.

But H&M appeals to younger shoppers who change their wardrobe more quickly, while Zara's shoppers are a bit older, leaving room for Uniqlo, an industry analyst said.

"Uniqlo brings in a broader customer base and is a bit more classic and tailored," said NPD Group Chief Industry Analyst Marshal Cohen. "They will appeal to a slightly more affluent shopper."

But the U.S. expansion is modest compared with Uniqlo's plans for Asia, especially China, Southeast Asia and South Korea. Of the 4,000 stores it hopes to operate by 2020, up from 1,000 now, some 70 percent will be in those countries.

Sales in Japan, which account for three quarters of Fast Retailing's sales, fell 6 percent in the last business year. Uniqlo has 843 stores in Japan.

"The (Asian) middle class will grow," Yanai said. "It's a gold rush."

The New York stores, which will attract U.S. and foreign tourists, as well as taste-makers, are central to its global strategy.

"This is our showcase for the world," Yanai added.

(Reporting by Phil Wahba; editing by Andre Grenon)

Copyright 2011 Thomson Reuters. Click for Restrictions.

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Fast Retailing Co Ltd's (9983.T) Uniqlo is launching its U.S. expansion this week with the opening of a flagship store in Manhattan that will anchor a global push to rely less on its home market o...
Fast Retailing Co Ltd's (9983.T) Uniqlo is launching its U.S. expansion this week with the opening of a flagship store in Manhattan that will anchor a global push to rely less on its home market o...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
munki
Global to Local now Local to Global
06:59 AM on 10/17/2011
It is spelled UNIQLO and reads as uniglo... I see...
Simple but popular in Japan
Dogvane
Here, smell this.
10:48 PM on 10/15/2011
Is that Japanese guy boinking Susan Sarandon?
02:25 PM on 10/15/2011
I shopped these for years in Japan. Selection varied based on which stores you went to (suburban stores often more bland and basic then downtown stores). It would be nice to get them to at least open one in Chicago. The clothes tend to be basics but the quality is much nicer than expected and I am still wearing tshirts and winter heat-tec under clothes I bought there 5 years ago and they are in still good condition.
01:13 PM on 10/15/2011
They're inexpensive & good quality. Probably 90% of all my clothes (and my shoes, my wallet, my umbrella etc) are Uniqlo's. Not that I'm a hardcore Uniqlo fan, it just happens it's that big in Japan (okay maybe I am.) IMHO the one big secret about its success is that you won't find any visible Uniqlo logo stamped in its products. That's a clever move, I mean, I guess no one wants to parade with a big UNIQLO stamped in the back since its name became synonym for anything cheap (often in a pejorative way.) Instead you find plenty of products designed after well-known manga characters, (mostly American) pro-sport teams, other corporation's logos (like Coca-cola, Toyota, Budweiser and on) and even classic jazz record jackets (I got some cool Pat Metheny, Chick Corea & Herbie Hancock's LP jacket T-shirts.)
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ChrisInYao
There's impermanence to all things big and small
09:39 AM on 10/16/2011
Thanks for the word on jazz-related shirts. Just took a glance at their website with several ECM Records shirts and I'm all over that! Other really awesome designs as well.
RealistBC
Micro-bios must pass muster.
10:32 AM on 10/15/2011
When do we get a competitor to Walmart? Someone needs to knock those @rr0g@nt b@$t@rd$ down a notch or three.
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imusintheevening
With,without,who'll deny it's whatthe fights about
04:41 AM on 10/15/2011
What took them so long?

Funny though, how I just read GAP, their peer group competitor is closing stores.
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littlebrowngirl
Brevity is the soul of wit - Shakespeare
10:49 PM on 10/14/2011
Love this store. I happened upon it by chance in soho a few years ago. Great clothes, stylish, good quality and great prices. BF still has some cool and classy wool sweaters from there and they look like new 6 years later. They have great jeans too.
07:27 PM on 10/14/2011
Def had enough of seeing these adds literally everywhere throughout NYC.
05:22 PM on 10/14/2011
God they look tacky.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
judiNJ
The Free Market is Not Free
03:57 PM on 10/14/2011
Will these fit Americans? We are, to say the least, a tad bit bigger.
dididangerlove
subverting political perversion
02:57 PM on 10/14/2011
Yes, expand. Please come to Arizona.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
MikeyJaii
Free $$ For Everyone.
11:51 AM on 10/14/2011
Good stuff, amazing products.
HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
JScott
John Galt's last name is McGuffin-Smithee
11:15 AM on 10/14/2011
How do you pronounce it uniKlo? We'll see how successful it is remember Seibu used to have a store in the US, but it's long gone, it's now the Peterson Auto Museum.
And Spain's biggest retailer is 'El Corte Ingles' I thought (well anyway they have stores all over Spain)
but as far as I know there are no stores in the US.
01:03 PM on 10/14/2011
yes, uniKLO. i love the uniqlo stores in London. But in Japan, they were like giant Old Navys.

Would love to have an Isetan here in the US.
10:18 AM on 10/14/2011
I've shopped Uniqlo SoHo. These clothes look great. If they made 40" trousers and shirts that fit my arms and chest I'd live in this stuff. Waif-like I'm not, but neither am I close to obese (I can see my Richard when I lick at my feet) I wish fashion-forward discount brands offered clothes that fit aging metrosexuls, too--not just starving college kids.