Xorte logo

News Markets Groups

USA | Europe | Asia | World| Stocks | Commodities



Add a new RSS channel

 
 


Keywords

2025-08-28 12:32:00| Fast Company

Retail store closures have been a common story in 2025. This month alone, the U.K.-based lifestyle and apparel chain FatFace announced that it would shutter its remaining stores in America. And just this week, tween accessory and apparel chain Claires listed hundreds of store closures in a revised bankruptcy filing. But at least one retailer has been bucking the trend of closures. Specialty discount chain Five Below has announced that it plans to open around 150 new stores during its fiscal year 2025. The company, which has been popular with Gen Z shoppers, appears to have an edge over some of its competitors as consumers who are worried about economic instability rein in their spending. Here are the upcoming locations, along with key details about the openings. Five Below announces 150 new stores for 2025 Yesterday, Five Below, Inc. (Nasdaq: FIVE) reported its second-quarter earnings for fiscal 2025. For the most part, the company had a good quarter. Here are the most important metrics it reported for the three-month period ending August 2: Net sales: $1.02 billion (up 23.7% from the same quarter a year earlier) Net income: $42.8 million (up from $33 million in the same quarter a year earlier) Adjusted diluted income per common share: 81 cents (versus 54 cents in the same quarter a year earlier) Announcing the results, Five Below CEO Winnie Park said they exceeded our sales and earnings expectations and demonstrated the effectiveness of our strategy and are a testament to the hard work, dedication and tight collaboration of our teams across the company, especially in an ever-changing tariff environment. In addition to the above numbers, Five Below also announced that it opened 32 net new stores during the quarter, bringing the companys total number of locations to 1,858 stores across 44 states. For the first half of its fiscal 2025, the company has now opened 87 net new stores.  It also revealed that for its current third quarter, it expects to open another 50 or so net new stores. For all of fiscal 2025, it expects to open approximately 150 net new stores. With 87 of those locations already opened, that means Five Below expects to open around an additional 63 locations during the last six months of its fiscal 2025. Where are the upcoming Five Below stores? Five Below did not provide a full list of the locations for its upcoming stores. Fast Company reached out to the retailer for more details and will update this post if we hear back. However, Five Below does list some of its upcoming locations on its website. As of Thursday, those locations consisted of 23 stores across 18 states. The opening dates for these locations are August 29 or September 5, 12, 19, or 26, depending on the venue. Alabama 66 Market Terrace, Suite 600, Oneonta, AL 35121 2759 Eastern Boulevard, Montgomery, AL 36117 Arizona 7515 West Encanto Boulevard, Suite 10, Phoenix, AZ 85035 Arkansas 2203 S Promenade Blvd, Suite 20415, Rogers, AR 72758 California 3902 Missouri Flat Rd, Placerville, CA 95667 580 Francisco Blvd W, San Rafael, CA 94901 Florida 2539 Countryside Boulevard, 7A, Clearwater, FL 33761 Georgia 853 Rowland Drive, Moultrie, GA 31768 249 Robert C. Daniel Jr. Parkway, Augusta, GA 30909 1892 Mount Zion Road, Morrow, GA 30260 Illinois 5247 IL Route 251, Peru, IL 61354 450 River Oaks West, Calumet City, IL 60409 Indiana 2363 Hwy 135 NW, Suite 113, Corydon, IN 47112 Iowa 501 Bass Pro Dr, Suite 400, Altoona, IA 50009 Maryland 5600 The Alameda, Baltimore, MD 21239 Michigan 5114 28th Street SE, Suite A, Grand Rapids, MI 49512 Mississippi 194 Covenant Dr., Batesville, MS 38606 Missouri 21 Conley Road, Columbia, MO 65201 New Jersey 3131 John F. Kennedy Blvd, Suite B, Union City, NJ 07087 New York PRELIM: 2255 E Ridge Rd, Irondequoit, NY 14622 Ohio 141 Wooster Rd N, Barberton, OH 44203 Tennessee 1633 Decatur Pike, Athens, TN 37303 Wisconsin 1501 N Broadway St, Suite #5, Menomonie, WI 54751 Five Below stock price rises After Five Below announced its earnings yesterday, shares of the discount retailer are rising in premarket trading this morning, as of the time of this writing. Currently, FIVE stock is up over 4.5% to $151 a share. FIVE shares closed up 1.71% yesterday. Before todays premarket rise, FIVE shares had jumped more than 37.5% since the year began. Over the past 12 months, FIVE shares have surged 75% as of yesterdays close. Its continued opening of new stores is a sign that the companys leadership has faith in its growth trajectory, even as retailers across America are closing their doors. Earlier this year, Coresight Research forecast that approximately 15,000 retail locations across America would close i 2025, while around 5,800 would open. With Five Belows continued store expansion, it is clearly in the latter group.


Category: E-Commerce

 

LATEST NEWS

2025-08-28 11:00:00| Fast Company

Earlier this year, I awoke to the sounds of some of my incarcerated peers excitedly talking about their trust accounts (our version of a bank account). Their restitution finescourt-ordered payments added to ones sentence as punishmenthad disappeared. Debts as high as $10,000 wiped clean. On January 1, 2025, California implemented Assembly Bill 1186, also known as the REPAIR Act, signed into law by Governor Gavin Newsom. The new law provides restitution relief for those who have had fines longer than 10 years or are under 18 years old. Outstanding balances that remain for adults fees will be cleared, and the responsibility for paying restitution fees for those under 18 now belongs to the Crime Victims Compensation Board. In a press release about the act, its author, Assemblymember Mia Bonta stated, It costs more to collect fines than they are worth, and those being ordered to pay restitution have an increased likelihood and severity of future incidents of harm. This is a win for justice and it is a win for public safety.” Among those experiencing the impacts of the act was Michael Walker. Sitting in his cell in San Quentin Rehabilitation Centers North Block housing unit, an officer stopped at Walkers door and handed him a copy of his prison account statement. “I didn’t look at it,” he said. “I folded it up and threw it in my locker; but then my neighbor asked me if my restitution fine was still showing. I checked, and sure enough it was gone. I just started smiling.” Walker had no money or assets when the criminal courts ordered him to pay a $10,000 fine over 20 years ago as part of his sentence. While the trial court judge said he could pay his debt off over time, his job in the prisons main kitchen only paid 0.21 cents an hour. For years he felt like the fine was mocking him. He felt a deep sense of what he described as “abject” poverty. “Its not that I didn’t want to pay my restitution, ” he said. I couldn’t. The state does not provide me with the economic ability to pay.” Two tiers down in North Block, Michael Moore experienced a similar sense of relief, his $10,000 also erased. Most of the jobs Moore has held in his years incarcerated do not have a pay number, meaning he has long received no money for his labor; for that reason, Moore is reluctant to work. He’s currently a student via a college program within San Quentin. At first I didn’t believe it, I thought they made a mistake, Moore shared. But then someone told me they had passed a new law. Its like a heavy weight has been lifted. The REPAIR Act comes at a pivotal moment when society is coming to terms with how finances have become a harmfully intrinsic component to realizing freedom from prison. Buried in fines before the REPAIR Act I have been incarcerated for 30 years. I believe in restitution, and paid mine off in 2013. It took me 17 years to pay off $5,000and it wasnt thanks to jobs in prison. Incarcerated people in California earn between $0.30 to $1.50 an hour on average, per the Prison Policy Institute; and with policies like Proposition 6, an effort to end forced labor, getting denied, we aren’t going to see increased wages inside prisons any time soon. I believe in compensating people to whom I have caused harm. But, as Bonta says, the system has long created more victims. Reports show that two-thirds of those paying restitution indicate unpaid fines impact their ability to afford food and rent, 60% say it threatens their ability to pay utilities, and 93% say it affects their ability to pay other debts. Youth of color are also more likely to be ordered to pay restitution and at higher amounts due to targeted policing of Black and brown communities. [Restitution] puts a lot of pressure on people to potentially go for the quick dollar, which is potentially committing another crime,” Bonta said. For decades, the California Department of Corrections & Rehabilitation (CDCR) has automatically deducted 55% of our earnings to go toward restitution. It could take a decade or more for those who make less than a dollar a day to pay off these debts, compared to a matter of months with a minimum wage job in society. (There is no statute of limitations for when restitution must be paid in California; incarcerated individuals are not obligated to pay before they leave prison). In response to massive income gaps nationally, many families seek to support their incarcerated loved ones by sending them money. The money they share is also halved by the state toward restitution. Parents have become subject to unforgiving collection practices and the collateral consequences of court-ordered debt, including negative credit impacts, bank levies, and property liens. Restitution fines have also inhibited people from getting paroled. Several months after a California Board Of Parole Hearing (BPH) panel found Vincent O’Bannon suitable for parole in the summer of 2023, he was escorted by two Investigative Service Unit (ISU) officers to an institutional security unit office at the San Quentin Rehabilitation Center. After reading him his Miranda Rights, the officers informed O’Bannon they were investigating him at the request of BPH authorities to determine if he was avoiding paying restitution. In monitoring several phone calls between O’Bannon and his wife, they had determined he was having his wife put money into the accounts of incarcerated peers to circumvent his payments. Restitution and other fines’ impact on parole OBannon said he placed money in others accounts in order to supplement the small portions of food the prison provides and to purchase hygiene and other products via commissary. Had he placed the money into his own account, it would be subject to a 55% restitution deduction, leaving him little to meet his needs. With barely enough palatable food and nutrition available to us, incarcerated people depend on our wages to buy other food. CDCR also does not provide incarcerated people with scented soaps, deodorant, hair grease, lotion, or toothpaste, nor do they provide comfortable leisure clothing. Incarcerated individuals have to purchase these items from canteen vendors that have historically engaged in price gouging. Consequently, it isn’t a mystery why the problem of circumventing restitution exists. “My intention was not to circumvent restitution, but to preserve and maximize money from my family, because they also have to pay other bills,” OBannon said. Restitution is already being ollected from my prison pay. At the time, OBannon still owed $3,935.29 on a $6,113.00 restitution order. ISU officers wrote a rules violation report alleging O’Bannon was hiding assets in violation of criminal penal code statute 155.5. O’Bannon was found guilty. The BPH rescinded his parole date and denied parole for three years. (This type of financial transaction monitoring has ripple effects on people who are up for parole and do not owe restitution at all. Some incarcerated people have been punished because they received money from, say, an aunt whose child is also in prison. By virtue of being cousins/related, these two incarcerated people can have their parole threatened). The Prison Policy Initiative released a report last year detailing how, across 16 states, fines and fees impacted parole decisions, sometimes leading to denials. And since 2009, the ACLU has been exposing and challenging modern day debtors prisons as a growing problem across the country. Debtors’ prisons were officially abolished under federal law by Congress in 1833. The U.S Supreme Court has held on multiple occasions that a prison term cannot be extended for failing to pay court costs and fines. In 1983, the court reaffirmed that incarcerating indigent debtors is unconstitutional under the Fourteenth Amendment. In April of this year, O’Bannon was able to escape his modern-day debtors’ prison when a Santa Clara County Superior Court judge resentenced him to 10 years with credit for time served. As for the allegations around circumventing his restitution, prosecutors simply asked that he write a letter of accountability. OBannon is now free and owes less than $500 in restitution. However, situations like O’Bannon’s remain a problem for thousands of others facing a parole board hearing in California who hope to preserve their moneyeither made inside or received from their familyin an effort to save, get paroled, and make the money needed to pay off their debts once released. The BPH considers these potential parole candidates as an unreasonable risk of danger to society and unsuitable for release. A new plan is needed to combat carceral debt While the BPH believes people like OBannon should pay their restitution, they aren’t actively advocating for fair wages for forced prison labor so incarcerated individuals can pay these debts, nor do they seem to be concerned about hurting taxpayers who will pay an additional $132,850 a year to keep people like OBannon incarcerated. The REPAIR Act is both a step in the right direction and validation that those like O’Bannon have been long mistreated by these financial confines, and that many others nationally are still being exploited by ineffective restitution measures. Still, other states remain dependent on an archaic response that impacts all partiessurvivors, taxpayers, loved ones, and the incarcerated. It’s time for this country to follow suit in Californias REPAIR Act and additionally end slave wages in prisons. Turning the pockets of poor people inside out will not suddenly create a rushing river of revenue. “In the 32 years I’ve been incarcerated, I only managed to pay $3,000 on a $10,000 restitution fine,” said Alex Ross, a peer support specialist. “I don’t know how many years it would have taken to pay off the rest, had the law not taken it off. I’d probably be dead before I finished paying.” As incarcerated people, we want to be accountable for the harm we have caused. We want to repair and recompense as best we can for the losses that have occured. But the criminal legal system’s practices are preventing us from doing just that. Putting us into perpetual debt or denying peoples parole because of failure to pay restitution or other fees doesnt help anyone. Theres a more effective way to move forward collectively.


Category: E-Commerce

 

2025-08-28 11:00:00| Fast Company

Our goal is really to get out all the cancer, says Dr. Arvind Bakhru. In the operating room, the gynecologic oncologist relies on sight and feel to help identify the cancerous lesions hell remove. But at the Arizona Center for Cancer Care Gynecologic Oncology, where Bakhru practices, there has been another tool at his disposal for the past year. Flicking on an infrared light at the end of his laparoscopethe thin surgical tube that helps surgeons see inside the body during minimally invasive procedures cancerous lesions start to glow green. Its a striking difference, Bakhru says. This fluorescent glow allows surgeons to see exactly where lesions are located, making removal easier and more preciseall courtesy of a medication called Cytalux. Its still relatively new, but the physicians using it and the company that produces it, On Target Laboratories, say its already having a big impact for some cancer patients. [Image: Cytalux] What is Cytalux? Cytaluxadministered via IV up to nine hours before surgery for ovarian cancer and up to 24 hours before surgery for lung cancerworks by attaching molecules of highly fluorescent, but harmless, dye to receptors that bring folate into cells. Because folate, a nutrient found in leafy greens and citrus fruits, supports cell growth and divisionand cancer cells are always growing and dividingfolate receptors are often over-expressed in tumors. The result is that cancer cells shine brightly under infrared light, while other cells stay dim, helping surgeons remove cancerous masses while sparing healthy tissue. The U.S. Food and Drug Administration first approved the medication in 2021 for use in ovarian cancer surgeries, following a successful clinical trial that saw Cytalux identify known cancerous lesions and, in over 30% of patients, additional lesions that hadnt previously been detected. In 2022, it was also approved for lung cancer surgeries. Since it became commercially available in September 2023, Cytalux has been used in over 1,000 surgeries for lung and ovarian cancersmost of which occurred just this year. Bill Peters, CEO of On Target Laboratories, says there are many more potential use cases for Cytalux. Because it has such an affinity for all different types of folate receptorswhich unfortunately are represented by 85% of cancerswe are in the very early days of our ability to treat patients, he says. [Image: Cytalux] Making surgeries more precise In lung cancer surgeries, Cytalux is a more precise alternative to dyes that can be applied to cancerous areas during the surgery itself. While these traditional dyes are effective at marking which areas need to be removed, it can be challenging for surgeons to avoid leakage and overlap when applying dye to multiple lesions in the same area. Cytalux gives the surgeon a lot of comfort, says Ryan Levy, chief of thoracic surgery at the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center. It increases surgeons confidence that theyve removed as much of the cancer hidden in the lobes of the lung as possiblewhile sparing the healthy tissue and lung function of their patients. To take a specimen out and then not be 100% sure that the lesions are in the specimen and then have to go back in and take out the rest of the lobe, thats sort of the nightmare scenario, Levy says. [Image: Cytalux] Catching issues early Beyond tissue-sparing surgeries, Levy says the drug is already playing an important role for patients who are referred to him with small, potentially cancerous, lesions on their lungs. The last thing a patient wants to be told is, Oh, you have a five millimeter spot, and were not going to be able to find it, and you just have to wait until it gets bigger, Levy says. Now we have a way of localizing stuff like that. Being able to find even the smallest spot of cancer is also pivotal in ovarian cancer surgery. Bakhru says patients with ovarian cancer tend to have vague symptomssuch as bloating, bladder issues, and just not feeling quite rightuntil the disease has progressed and the tumor is large. However, he notes that the past 15 to 20 years of research has pointed to removing even small, not yet symptomatic, lesions as being crucial for a good long-term prognosis. For now, Cytalux is the only product of its kind available, and Peters says no other drugmakers have completed the clinical trials needed to apply for FDA approval. Bakhru sees it as “the lead example” of multiple potential products that will help surgeons identify and remove cancer with increased precision. I think its important for people to know that the quality of your surgry and the completeness of your surgery really matters in terms of survival and keeping that cancer from coming back, Bakhru says.


Category: E-Commerce

 

Latest from this category

28.08This overlooked lifestyle change could be hurting your brain
28.08Best Buy reports strong sales, maintains annual forecast amid tariff worries
28.08Intel has received the $5.7 billion under Trumps investment deal
28.08Stocks inch toward records after economic data and mixed earnings reports
28.08Fords recall streak grows: 500,000 more vehicles pulled for brake defects
28.08The government just made it harder for you to weigh in on federal rules
28.08Walgreens names Mike Motz as CEO after going private with Sycamore Partners
28.08As online age checks become more common, critics worry about losing internet freedom
E-Commerce »

All news

28.08Bull Radar
28.08What Makes This Trade Great: SOGP
28.08Tomorrow's Earnings/Economic Releases of Note; Market Movers
28.08Best Buy reports strong sales, maintains annual forecast amid tariff worries
28.08This overlooked lifestyle change could be hurting your brain
28.08Intel has received the $5.7 billion under Trumps investment deal
28.08Stocks inch toward records after economic data and mixed earnings reports
28.08Fords recall streak grows: 500,000 more vehicles pulled for brake defects
More »
Privacy policy . Copyright . Contact form .