The
virus, which began in China at the end of last year, has led to
school closures and canceled sports events in the United States
and beyond. It is widely expected to hit retail sales as
shoppers stay home to avoid catching the highly contagious
COVID-19 respiratory illness that the virus causes.
The United States' top infectious disease expert Dr. Anthony
Fauci said conditions would likely get worse before they get
better.
Nike on Sunday said it will close stores in Canada, Western
Europe, Australia and New Zealand from March 16 to 27. It will
continue normal operations at stores in South Korea, Japan, most
of China and in many other countries.
"We are taking additional steps in other Nike-managed
facilities, including the option to work from home," the U.S.
sportswear firm said in a statement.
Under Armour said it would shutter all North America stores from
Monday for about two weeks. Lululemon said it would close its
stores in North America and Europe for a similar period.
"We are living in uncertain times and we're learning more about
this virus every day," Lululemon said in a statement.
Nike and Lululemon operate over 650 stores combined in the
United States, while Under Armour has nearly 190 stores in North
America, showed the companies' latest annual reports. Each said
their online stores would continue to be open.
Apparel retailer Lands End Inc and Columbia Sportswear Co also
said on Sunday they would temporarily shut all of their stores
in the United States and North America respectively.
Gap Inc is temporarily reducing store hours for all of its
locations in the United States and Canada, and closing over 100
stores, incoming Chief Executive Sonia Syngal said in a message
posted on the company's website https://corporate.gapinc.com/en-us/articles/2020/03/gap-inc-reduces-store-hours.
Apparel retailer Urban Outfitters Inc, which owns brands
including Anthropologie and Free People, said on Saturday it
would close its stores worldwide until at least March 28.
Last week, retailers including Macy's Inc and Saks Fifth Avenue
sent notices to shoppers saying they were open for business, in
a move to stem losses due to a drop in store traffic.
Earlier this month, Nike temporarily closed its European
headquarters in the Netherlands after an employee was infected
with the coronavirus.
(Reporting by Maria Ponnezhath and Ismail Shakil; Additional
reporting by Ann Maria Shibu; Editing by Diane Craft and
Christopher Cushing)
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