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Rona to sell assets, get back to basics

Canada's largest home-improvement retailer says it's preparing to sell non-core assets and make other strategic moves to improve its profitability.

Canada's largest home-improvement retailer says it's preparing to sell non-core assets and make other strategic moves to improve its profitability.

Rona Inc. didn't provide details about where the cuts will be made and said specific initiatives will be revealed in future announcements.

For now, Rona says its acting chief executive and board will immediately focus on "unlocking the profit potential of a simplified business model."

U.S. takeover nixed

The troubled Montreal-company has been under pressure to improve its bottom line, especially since it rejected a lucrative takeover bid by U.S. rival Lowe's.

Lowe's unofficial bid which was dropped after the American company met stiff resistance from Rona's board, Quebec politicians and the independent dealership owners that operate under Rona's brands had been worth $1.8 billion.

Since then, Rona has reported dismal financial results, removed its long-time chief executive officer and received a formal request from a major fund manager for a shareholder meeting to select a new board of directors.

Its shares closed Wednesday at $10.15 well below the offer of $14.50 per share that the Rona board rejected in July.

Rona's statement on Thursday suggests that the current board hasn't completely abandoned its previous approach to improving the company's lagging profits.

It said acting CEO Dominique Boies, the Rona management team and its board of directors will immediately focus efforts on three priorities.

"Using the same rigour and disciplined approach introduced a year ago with the three financial priorities, the strategic priorities will further refine Rona's business model and enable the corporation to accelerate value creation for its stakeholders," the company said.

The priorities were: leverage the strength of Rona's core business, grow key customer segments with a "more compelling value proposition" and unlock the profit potential of a simplified business model.

Rona currently has nearly 30,000 employees and 830 locations under its banner, giving Rona a bigger reach in Canada than Home Depot or Lowe's. Home Depot has just 180 stores across Canada and Lowe's has about 31 Canadian locations.

Broad network

Under the leadership of long-time CEO Robert Dutton, who left the company suddenly last month, Rona had amassed a retail network with a wide variety of store formats and sizes many of them acquired by purchasing local and regional home improvement and building centres.

"Rona, through its dedicated dealer-owners and employees, has built a very strong and valuable corporation over the past 73 years," Boies said in a statement.

"Rona's nationwide growth did not come without a certain level of complexity. The focus on our three strategic priorities will enable us to simplify our business model, reconnect to our roots as one of Canada's best distributors, clarify the value proposition for our retail and professional customers and therefore enable us to maximize the value of our core businesses.

"Our strategic priorities are perfectly aligned with our three financial priorities and underscore our efforts to compete in today's marketplace and improve our operational and financial results."