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99 Cents Only Stores Fight Lost: Inflation, Theft Force Nationwide Closure

On Friday, the California-based 99 Cents Only Stores said that they will close all their 371 of its outlets running across the US in various locations of California, Arizona, Nevada and Texas, ending the era of discounted stores running nearly for more than 45 years now.

99 Cents Only Stores

99 Cents Only Stores: Why its Closing?

The temporary CEO, Mike Simoncic, said that the store has struggled for years because of the COVID-19 pandemic, changes in what customers want, prices going up, and more things being stolen from the store.

He said that it was a hard decision to make and not what they wanted. He explained that the past few years have been tough for stores like theirs. As a result, he will be leaving his position.

The 99 Cents Only Stores are closing down because another discount store, Dollar Tree, said it was closing 1,000 of its stores last month.

The first Store was opened in 1982 by Dave Gold in Los Angeles. He was 50 years old at the time and had previously worked in his father’s liquor store. Gold found that selling items for 99 cents made them sell out fast. This success motivated him to create a different kind of dollar store.

Why are Dollar Stores Closing?

Why Dollar General is Thriving

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