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5 Family Dollar Stores, Inc. — 2009


                                      Joseph W. Leonard
                                      Miami University


                                      FDO

                                      www.familydollar.com
                                      As the economy limps along in mid-2009 and pushes more households into lower
                                      incomes, Family Dollar Store’s CEO Howard R. Levine is overseeing continued expan-
                                      sion and growth. His father, Leon Levine, founded the company when he was in his early
                                      20s in 1959, and the elder Levine now sports the title chairman emeritus. Family Dollar
                                      offers customers a variety of high-quality, good-value merchandise. The company caters
                                      to the low- to low-middle income group (defined as households under $30,000 or
                                      $35,000 of annual income) with offerings of competitively priced merchandise in conve-
                                      nient neighborhood stores. Family Dollar Stores has 31 percent of its items priced at a
                                      dollar or less.
                                          For 2008, the Dow Jones Average was down 34 percent, the worst year
                                      since 1931. Of the S&P 500 stocks index, only 24 stocks were up in 2008. Family
                                      Dollar Stores led the way with an increase of 35 percent. Will this solid performance
                                      continue?


                                      History
                                      In 1959, when Family Dollar opened its first store in Charlotte, North Carolina, Leon
                                      Levine offered customers a varied of good-valued merchandise for under $2. The
                                      concept was simple, “The customers are the boss, and you need to keep them happy.”
                                      Family Dollar went public in 1970, achieved annual sales of $100 million with just
                                      under 300 stores by 1977, opened its 1,500th store in 1989 and its 2,500th store in
                                      1996, and grew to nearly 5,000 stores and sales approaching $5 billion when he retired
                                      as chairman in 2003. In his high school and college years, his son Howard Levine
                                      worked for Family Dollar. Howard was named CEO in 1998, and when his father
                                      retired in January 2003, he became chairman and CEO. At age 49, he continues today
                                      as chairman and CEO.


                                      Today’s Facts and Financials
                                      Family Dollar operates more than 6,600 stores in 44 states plus the District of Columbia.
                                      The company does have a small role in international business because about 51 percent of
                                      its merchandise is procured from international manufacturers often through agents but
                                      also from direct importing from the manufacturers. No single supplier accounts for more
                                      than 8 percent of the merchandise purchases. Family Dollar Stores is ranked number 359
                                      on the Fortune 500.
                                          Family Dollar continues its strategy of geographic expansion and new store openings.
                                      Headquartered near Charlotte, North Carolina, Family Dollar employs 44,000 people, about
                                      25,000 full time and the others as part-timers. Family Dollar’s revenues of $6.984 billion in
                                      FY2008—the 12 months ended August 2008—showed an increase of 2.2 percent over the
                                      year ending August 2007. As indicated in Exhibit 1, the operating profits during FY2008
                                      were $365 million, a decrease of 6 percent from FY2007. The net profit in FY2008 was
                                      $233 million, a 4 percent decrease from FY2007.
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