一間公司可以左右一個城市的經濟 !
finance.yahoo.com
SIDNEY, Neb. (AP) -- Many Sidney residents are on edge as they wait for Cabela's to announce what it plans to do.
The
outdoor gear seller is evaluating strategic options because it is under
pressure from an activist investor. Cabela's said last month that it
didn't plan to comment on its strategic decisions until after its review
was completed but gave no timetable for finishing.
The
Omaha World-Herald reports (http://bit.ly/1ILajBW ) that the developers
of a Holiday Inn Express hotel near Cabela's store and headquarters in
Sidney have put the project on hold until the company announces its
plan.
Cabela's has close ties to its hometown of Sidney where it employs about 2,000 in a town of about 7,000.
Elliott Management has urged
Cabela's to consider selling its credit card unit or possibly the entire
company. That firm owns 6 percent of Cabela's shares and holds options
to buy another 5 percent.
Keith Nienhueser said Cabela's drives nearly all the work his construction company does in Sidney.
"I don't work for them directly, but all the work we're doing is because of them," he said.
Nienhueser
Construction did the dirt and utility work for Cabela's new
headquarters building that's set to open this year. The construction
company also worked on the new Sidney Regional Medical Center and part
of a neighborhood of 700 homes that Cabela's is sponsoring.
Nienhueser
said he has a feeling that Cabela's will continue to be based in Sidney
because the founding family controls nearly 24 percent of the company's
stock.
"They have a big influence," he said.
The
company was founded in 1961 when Dick Cabela started selling fishing
flies through the mail from his kitchen table with his wife, Mary, and
brother, Jim.
Tim
Miller, who recalls the problems that followed the closing of an Army
ammunition depot in Sidney in the 1960s, said Sidney would be devastated
if the company moves.
"There
are a lot of people on pins and needles. But I really do think down
deep that Cabela's isn't going to move," said Miller, 62, who owns an
office supply store and grew up in Sidney."
Sidney's vice mayor, Wendall Gaston, said Cabela's and the community have been good for each other over the years.
"It's
a partnership," said Gaston, who works as a Safeway pharmacist. "I
don't think Cabela's would be as successful without Sidney and, of
course, Sidney wouldn't be as successful without Cabela's."
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蘋果同三星都可以左右國家股市同好多工廠 :)
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