Advance Auto Parts closing all California stores – Daily News

Advance Auto Parts is rolling out of California.

The auto supply company, with more than 150 stores in this state, is closing all California locations and hundreds of others across the Western U.S.

In all, it is closing more than 700 stores and distribution centers in California, Oregon, Washington, Nevada and Arizona, a move that comes as the company aims to “improve the productivity of all our assets and to create shareholder value,” Shane O’Kelly, the company’s president and chief executive, said in a news release.

In last week’s third-quarter earnings call, O’Kelly said the company will focus on top-performing stores and ditch stores that are struggling.

“We made the decision to close certain non-performing, nonstrategic stores in the U.S. to better position our assets based for long-term sustainable growth,” he said. Instead, Advance Auto Parts will work to “improve store concentration in our strongest markets.”

94 shuttered stores in Southern California

Like other auto parts stores, this store sold items for do-it-yourself car repairs, with everything from batteries to fuel injector O-Ring kits to air filters stacked on its shelves.

The company, based in Raleigh, N.C., has 94 stores, with more than two-thirds concentrated in San Diego, Orange and Los Angeles counties.

  • Los Angeles County: 36 stores
  • San Diego County: 14 stores
  • Orange County: 14 stores
  • San Bernardino County: 13 stores
  • Riverside County: 10 stores
  • Ventura County: 4 stores
  • Imperial County: 3 stores

While the company reported a narrower loss of $6 million in the third quarter, down from a loss of $62 million in the year ago period, it saw net sales from continuing operations drop by $100 million compared to the same period in 2023. Same-store sales decreased by 2.3%.

Advance Auto Parts has two new locations in Chino, one on 4046 Grand Ave. and the other on 11960 Central Ave. (Courtesy of Advanced Auto Parts)

The company, founded in 1932, has been in turnaround mode for the past year as it tries to reverse sliding sales and return to profitability. It recently sold Worldpac, an automotive parts wholesaler, for $1.5 billion as it reworks its business model.

The company did not say how many jobs will be lost in its latest announcement.

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