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Reopened Macy’s Stores Are Performing Better Than Expected

Hong Kong Leader Tells Locals to Be Good Citizens for China on Anniversary of Million-Strong Protest

One year after Hong Kong witnessed the dramatic escalation of ongoing anti-CCP, pro-democracy protests, city leader Carrie Lam has requested for Hongkongers to leave behind the chaos of the past year to become good citizens of China its the ruling Chinese Communist Party (CCP). “The immediate issue is to prove that ‘one country, two systems’ work well in Hong Kong,” Lam said in her weekly press conference on June 9. “[T]o prove that Hong Kong people are reasonable and sensible citizens of the People’s Republic of China—that we could be trusted to continue to have our own way of life, and our own way of systems within the whole country.” Lam was responding to a reporter’s question about remarks made by Zhang Xiaoming, the deputy director of the Hong Kong…

Reopened Macy’s Stores Are Performing Better Than Expected

Perhaps there’s some light at the end of the tunnel for battered retailers: Macy’s just revealed that its first quarter won’t be quite as dismal as expected.

The department store previously forecast up to a $1.1 billion operating loss in its first quarter. But, as stores reopen—450 at last count—customers are returning in much larger numbers than Macy’s had believed possible. Macy’s now expects an operating loss of “only” $969 million between February and May, Macy’s said in a release on June 9.

The somewhat rosier outlook sent Macy’s shares nearly 10 percent higher in premarket trading.

“Our strong digital business sales trend continued throughout May, and it is encouraging to see that as we reopen a store, the digital business in that geography continues to be strong,” Macy’s CEO Jeff Gennette said in the release. He also said that the reopened stores are “performing better than anticipated.”

Reopened Macy’s Stores Are Performing Better Than Expected Pedestrians walk by the Macy’s flagship store after workers cleaned and boarded up damage sustained during a night of violent protests and looting in Midtown, Manhattan in New York City, on June 2, 2020. (Scott Heins/Getty Images)

Macy’s will release its complete results for the first quarter on July 1.

The reversal is a sharp contrast from early March when the CCP (Chinese Communist Party) virus forced the retailer to temporarily close all of its 775 stores in the United States and furlough a majority of its 125,000 employees.

That’s when it painted a bleak picture of its financial outlook, because it said that it lost a “majority” of sales because of the brick-and-mortar closures and has implemented other changes to bolster its bottom line, including drawing down its credit line and freezing hiring and spending.

Still, the first quarter will be dismal compared to the same quarter a year ago. Macy’s expects sales to fall 45 percent to $3 billion and it’s expecting a quarterly net loss of $652 million. It raked in a $136 million quarterly net gain for the same time period in 2019.

Macy’s said late Monday that it has taken on $4.5 billion in new financing. That gives it “sufficient liquidity to address the needs of the business, including funding operations and the purchase of new inventory for upcoming merchandising seasons.”

Reopened Macy’s stores look a little different from their pre-pandemic versions. It’s limiting the number of customers allowed inside and installing social distancing signs and markers. Customers are also required to use hand sanitizer before trying on jewelry or watches.

The CNN Wire and Epoch Times staff contributed to this report.

Focus News: Reopened Macy’s Stores Are Performing Better Than Expected

Second Major Australian Union Stands Against Beijing, Tells Victorian Premier ‘History Will Judge All of Us’

A leading member of Australia’s second-largest worker’s union has pleaded with the Victorian state premier to withdraw from its Belt and Road agreement with the Chinese Communist Party (CCP), saying “history will judge all of us” if it remains tied to Beijing. Michael Donovan, head of the Victorian branch of the Shop, Distributive and Allied Employees Association (SDA) wrote a letter to Daniel Andrews, the state premier saying, “We reject the notion that somehow the Chinese people need and want an authoritarian government because they are too immature to govern themselves, and are not deserving the same rights we have.” The letter, obtained by The Herald Sun on May 31, alluded to the SDA’s connection with Solidarity in Poland, a worker’s union which played a major role in the country’s…