Haggen Packs It In? Bankrupt Grocer Plans to Sell All Stores
The bankrupt Haggen grocery chain quietly announces plans to sell off all of its remaining stores.
The bankrupt Haggen grocery chain quietly announces plans to sell off all of its remaining stores.
Albertsons is among the interested buyers, as bankrupt Haggen announces auction dates and baseline bidders for 95 stores.
A&P and Haggen are shedding stores, while Fresh & Easy and Brookshire’s may be next to go up for sale.
Gelson’s and Smart & Final are named as bidders for three dozen closing Haggen stores in California and Nevada.
The complete list of Haggen stores that will stay open, and close, after the company ends its ill-fated expansion and retreats to the Pacific Northwest.
Haggen stays positive in the face of negativity, by disabling and deleting comments about its bankruptcy on its social media sites.
The troubled grocery chain Haggen files for bankruptcy, as it plans to sell even more stores and honor only “certain customer programs” going forward.
Haggen sues Albertsons for $1 billion, claiming that the high prices and low quality in its new stores are the result of Albertsons’ “sabotage”.
Haggen announces the closure of 27 stores, just six months after acquiring them from Safeway and Albertsons, to largely negative customer reviews.
A small grocery chain that bought more than 100 competitors’ stores to become a very large grocery chain, is struggling – and shoppers say they know why.