The Japan Times - Hudson's Bay Company: from fur trade to department store downfall

EUR -
AED 3.963029
AFN 77.467581
ALL 99.220054
AMD 421.368295
ANG 1.931591
AOA 989.420508
ARS 1157.541438
AUD 1.713813
AWG 1.944854
AZN 1.831514
BAM 1.954035
BBD 2.178555
BDT 131.111598
BGN 1.95492
BHD 0.406702
BIF 3206.716204
BMD 1.078976
BND 1.449232
BOB 7.455267
BRL 6.130723
BSD 1.078931
BTN 92.445226
BWP 14.811066
BYN 3.53102
BYR 21147.922163
BZD 2.167274
CAD 1.543908
CDF 3099.896729
CHF 0.953825
CLF 0.026697
CLP 1024.494518
CNY 7.844364
CNH 7.854667
COP 4494.095306
CRC 539.672664
CUC 1.078976
CUP 28.592854
CVE 110.178267
CZK 24.941438
DJF 192.135188
DKK 7.461483
DOP 68.275936
DZD 144.423752
EGP 54.565305
ERN 16.184634
ETB 142.834597
FJD 2.514606
FKP 0.832937
GBP 0.835661
GEL 2.978143
GGP 0.832937
GHS 16.718355
GIP 0.832937
GMD 77.81074
GNF 9305.914669
GTQ 8.323107
GYD 225.720693
HKD 8.395542
HNL 27.538384
HRK 7.535999
HTG 140.9282
HUF 401.049639
IDR 17939.382146
ILS 3.989291
IMP 0.832937
INR 92.178763
IQD 1407.466384
IRR 45406.773377
ISK 142.292959
JEP 0.832937
JMD 168.905438
JOD 0.764973
JPY 161.679136
KES 139.489095
KGS 93.362717
KHR 4292.106945
KMF 490.548027
KPW 971.059773
KRW 1590.385296
KWD 0.332609
KYD 0.897299
KZT 543.143647
LAK 23231.491039
LBP 96434.846104
LKR 318.76474
LRD 215.161443
LSL 19.818419
LTL 3.185934
LVL 0.652662
LYD 5.183772
MAD 10.3904
MDL 19.397883
MGA 5010.336051
MKD 61.327174
MMK 2265.078215
MNT 3767.539803
MOP 8.64475
MRU 42.545949
MUR 49.255904
MVR 16.658648
MWK 1865.8096
MXN 21.965358
MYR 4.785483
MZN 68.931881
NAD 19.818419
NGN 1656.123951
NIO 39.578189
NOK 11.278878
NPR 147.555155
NZD 1.88553
OMR 0.415386
PAB 1.078976
PEN 3.947328
PGK 4.392219
PHP 61.772853
PKR 302.198176
PLN 4.171535
PYG 8575.174491
QAR 3.927703
RON 4.96307
RSD 116.866764
RUB 91.53731
RWF 1529.392479
SAR 4.046178
SBD 9.171195
SCR 15.446913
SDG 647.91016
SEK 10.802348
SGD 1.447838
SHP 0.847905
SLE 24.573647
SLL 22625.580443
SOS 616.244574
SRD 39.441719
STD 22332.616902
SVC 9.441211
SYP 14028.684711
SZL 19.818419
THB 36.598762
TJS 11.742233
TMT 3.775339
TND 3.354337
TOP 2.598662
TRY 40.980401
TTD 7.315671
TWD 35.83797
TZS 2858.440007
UAH 44.65298
UGX 3948.811786
USD 1.078976
UYU 45.495976
UZS 13898.092984
VES 74.671431
VND 27601.68596
VUV 132.973574
WST 3.051091
XAF 654.064036
XAG 0.031953
XAU 0.000346
XCD 2.921144
XDR 0.813941
XOF 654.064036
XPF 119.331742
YER 265.442859
ZAR 20.013428
ZMK 9712.075389
ZMW 30.383559
ZWL 347.42971
  • RBGPF

    68.0000

    68

    +100%

  • RYCEF

    0.3500

    10.05

    +3.48%

  • RELX

    0.2600

    50.67

    +0.51%

  • NGG

    0.1700

    65.78

    +0.26%

  • SCS

    0.3600

    11.32

    +3.18%

  • VOD

    -0.1000

    9.27

    -1.08%

  • CMSC

    0.0400

    22.44

    +0.18%

  • RIO

    0.1500

    60.23

    +0.25%

  • GSK

    -0.8700

    37.87

    -2.3%

  • CMSD

    0.0100

    22.82

    +0.04%

  • BCC

    0.8200

    98.91

    +0.83%

  • JRI

    0.0400

    12.98

    +0.31%

  • BTI

    -0.2700

    41.1

    -0.66%

  • BCE

    -0.1800

    22.78

    -0.79%

  • BP

    0.0200

    33.81

    +0.06%

  • AZN

    -0.9000

    72.6

    -1.24%

Hudson's Bay Company: from fur trade to department store downfall
Hudson's Bay Company: from fur trade to department store downfall / Photo: Daniel SLIM - AFP/File

Hudson's Bay Company: from fur trade to department store downfall

From the 17th century fur trade that birthed a nation to the last major department store in Canada, The Hudson's Bay Company has left an indelible mark, but its storied 354 years are crashing to an end.

Text size:

Canada's oldest company -- after filing on March 7 for protection from the creditors that are owed more than Can$1 billion (US$700 million) -- has received court approval to close all but six of its 80 stores.

The US-based private equity owners of the company, who acquired it in 2008, will also shutter three Saks Fifth Avenue and 13 Saks Off 5th locations it operates through a licensing agreement.

This all comes at a time when Canada faces threats of annexation from its giant southern neighbor, after President Donald Trump repeatedly declared that Canada is not a real country and should become the 51st US state.

For Canadians mourning the loss of their heritage, it's a major blow.

Andre Fortin, 90, said the store has been a big part of his life in Montreal. "I shopped here often. The store had everything we wanted."

"It's a part of our history," he told AFP.

HBC's flagship downtown Toronto department store and five others in the Toronto and Montreal areas have been spared in the initial cull. But they could eventually be liquidated as well, company lawyer Ashley Taylor told a recent hearing.

The court heard last week that more than 9,000 jobs will be lost in one of the nation's largest mass terminations.

- Rupert's Land -

Founded in 1670 by fur traders given a royal charter by the British monarch King Charles II, the company once owned a swath of western and northern Canada.

"It was hugely important to what we now call Canada," Amelia Fay, curator of the HBC collection at the Manitoba Museum in Winnipeg, which has more than 27,000 artifacts, told AFP.

The company established trading posts, she explained, "initiating a colonial process that shaped Canada."

Several of those outposts became Canadian cities, such as Winnipeg, Edmonton and Vancouver.

However, the company is also seen today as a symbol of the colonization of Indigenous populations, which led to a policy of assimilation that was devastating for the First Nations.

In 1869, two years after the founding of Canada, HBC sold its land holdings -- which were known as Rupert's Land and included parts of what are now five provinces and two Arctic territories -- to the nascent country.

"That large real estate transaction was a pivotal moment in the history of Canada," Fay said.

The company, meanwhile, shifted into retail as furs stopped being popular.

In the early 20th century, as Canada's population exploded with the arrival of more settlers, HBC built large department stores in cities across the country.

"The reason HBC was so successful was their ability to adjust to what was happening in the world, to change course. And it seems that that is no longer the case," Fay commented.

- Liquidation sales -

Online shopping and changing consumer habits, say retail experts, both played a part in the decline of the iconic department store, whose downfall is just the latest in a string of North American closures.

"We're witnessing the retiring of the department store as we know it," said retail analyst Bruce Winder.

The retail sector, he said, has fractured into niches from discount chains like Walmart to stores selling luxury and specialty brands.

At once-bustling stores across Canada this week, shoppers picked through merchandise looking for bargains and memorabilia such as HBC wool blankets with colored stripes that date back to the 1700s and, according to Fay, "have become a symbol of the company and Canada."

"They're all gone," a disappointed shopper in Ottawa said with a sigh.

Sophia Cisneros, 22, recalled fondly that her mother used to take her shopping here. "The Bay had whatever we needed: clothes, shoes, kitchenware, beds sheets, furniture."

"You could spend the day here. It was fun," recalled Michelle Boulanger, 72, in Montreal.

"Its closure is going to leave a big hole," she said. "It's sad."

T.Sato--JT