Macy's for sure. They are already selling their biggest stores in the cities.
2 months ago | 42
There are some companies that make for easy picks - JCPenney, Game Stop, Macy’s, etc. I’m going to go with something a bit more bold with Tesla.
2 months ago | 15
Macy, JC penny, game stop, Khol’s, forever 21, GAP
2 months ago (edited) | 74
People saying Apple are being crazy. You don't have to like them, that's not relevant to the question at hand, but they have been very conservative with the usage of their profits and have a larger cash cushion tucked away to get through any tough times than any company of similar size in the world.
2 months ago | 17
Philip Morris, Uber, and a bunch of car companies. I predict even more petroleum company mergers, so names will disappear.
2 months ago | 8
Some of these comments are off the wall 😂 Target has proven its ability to adapt to changing times like Walmart. Monster beverage has been around and the energy drink consumer tends to be a current younger/middle age demographic that will be around for a while yet. Nvidia will remain strong as AI continues to grow. Gamestop, Macy's, Kohls, niche retail clothing stores are all good candidates for the cut list though
2 months ago | 19
Many weaker watch brands likely won't survive as Gen Z aren't into mechanics or quartz and the smartwatch space is much more competitive. Seiko, Citizen, Casio will survive, but Timex, hmm not so so much. Companies making larger bulky expensive stuff for the American Dream homes will likely go busy, as Millenial and Gen Z can't afford homes. Things like pianos and associated parafernalia. In food retail , Subway seems to be falling by the wayside.
2 months ago | 3
The trash car brands like Nissan, Mitsubishi, any Stellantis company. I work in the auto industry and trust me these brands are in full panic mode. Nissan is begging Honda to merge with them but Honda is smart and telling them hellllll no.
2 months ago | 16
I think at least one of the mag 6 will fall or be broken up significantly
2 months ago | 3
A lot of clothing stores that fail to adapt to the e commerce
2 months ago | 2
KFC, White Castle, Burger King I mean how are these even still around??
2 months ago | 5
Intel. They’ve been losing ground in every market for about 8 years straight. Their GPUs are a mess and nobody wants them.
2 months ago | 3
I think companies die, but IPs seem to last the test of time like a dormant seed. For example, Toy's R US is making a comeback in the US at least, Kodak did the same. Companies collapse on paper, but the IP never truly died. If I had to paint a broad stroke, I'd say niche buinesses are the first to always go in any sector.
2 months ago | 3
GameStop, liquid death beverage, doge, shiba inu coins
2 months ago (edited) | 7
Tesla. Too many irons in too many fires and an ADD k-holed founder/CEO . Literally every sector of their business model (cars, robots, AI, autonomous cars, energy, etc) getting crushed by competitors.
2 months ago | 2
Guitar Center We lost Sam Ash after Covid and it's a joke for anyone who takes music half seriously due to lack of trained salesmen, generic selection of gear, lack of boutique equipment, no room to negotiate used instruments, and a corporate flag that prioritizes selling extra coverage and credit cards over anything else.
2 months ago | 2
Humphrey Yang
YouTube just launched this community feature! I believe it’s like a discussion for certain topics. So let’s start with a 🌶️ question:
What major company do you genuinely believe won’t exist in 20 years?
2 months ago | [YT] | 184