Five Below Plans To Open 1,000 New Stores

(CBS/CNN) -- Toys "R" Us filed for bankruptcy in 2017 and closed all of its stores. That's left an opening for rivals like discount toy chain Five Below to fill the gap.

Five Below, as its name suggests, sells most of its toys, games, room decorations and tech accessories for less than $5. The company said Wednesday that it plans to open 1,000 new stores over the next three years.

The chain has been opening hundreds of stores annually in recent years to step into the void left by Toys "R" Us and woo shoppers hunting for discounts. Five Below, which targets teens and tweens as its key customers and has roughly 1,200 locations currently, sees an opportunity to add another 2,500 new stores by 2030.

Five Below already has a heavy presence in New England, with 24 stores in Massachusetts and five in New Hampshire.

Back in 2010, when Five Below had just over 100 stores, co-founder David Schlessinger talked to CBS News about the chain's appeal in a weak economy when customers are looking to stretch their dollar.

"People don't come to our store and say: 'How do I get a lower price on this item?' They say: 'I'm thrilled to be able to buy a lot of the stuff you have for $5 or less, but what I really want are the brands, quality and the trend I want,'" Schlessinger said.

The chain's latest growth push also reflects the larger boom of discount stores. The sector has been somewhat immune to the rise of online shopping and other challenges plaguing many brick-and-mortar retailers.

Last year, for example, three dollar store chains accounted for almost half of all the new stores opened in the United States.

Bargain clothing outlets such as TJ Maxx and Burlington, discount grocers including Aldi and others are also opening hundreds of new stores each year.

Appealing to teens and tweens

Five Below's locations are relatively small and the chain describes itself as a "high-energy retail concept" in regulatory filings. Its tagline: "Let Go & Have Fun."

Stores have low shelves, colorful signs, pop music playing on speakers and wheelbarrows and oil drums full of merchandise.

Sporting goods, games, toys, tech gadgets, books, electronic accessories and arts and crafts make up around half of Five Below's approximately $3 billion in annual sales. T-shirts, beauty offerings and home goods account for around 30%, while party and seasonal goods, greeting cards, candy and snacks make up the rest.

Five Below has recently moved into new product areas, such as esports, and partnered with Instacart to offer home delivery.

The company looks to distinguish itself from competitors like dollar stores, big box chains and Amazon by focusing on wooing a targeted slice of shoppers.

"We monitor trends in the ever-changing tween and teen markets and are able to quickly identify and respond," the company said in filings. "Our price points enable tweens and teens to shop independently, often using their own money."

However, despite Five Below's new store initiative and a 3.4% increase in comparable sales during its latest quarter, investors were not impressed: the chain's stock fell around 5% Wednesday.

Despite the dip, Five Below still has a "strong long-term outlook," said Telsey Advisory Group Analyst Joseph Feldman.

(© Copyright 2022 CBS Broadcasting Inc. All Rights Reserved. CNN's Nathaniel Meyersohn contributed to this report.)

 

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