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Is JCPenney Backpedaling From Its Pricing Strategy?




By Christina Cheddar Berk, News Editor

NEW YORK (CNBC) -- Even as hedge fund manager Bill Ackman continues to trumpet that he believes that JCPenney(JCP) has the right strategy to turn its business around, reports are circulating that the retailer may be backing off its pricing strategy.

In January, JCPenney's new CEO Ron Johnson said he wanted to reinvent the department store as the place shoppers can go to for "fair and square" pricing, but as the retailer's poor first-quarter earnings showed, the company is far from reinvigorating its sales.

Now the company appears to be backpedaling from its nonpromotional stance.

Deutsche Bank analyst Charles Grom said the company has added five "Best Price Friday" events to its calendar. The first took place this past weekend ahead of the highly promotional Memorial Day weekend, and another is slated for Black Friday in November. Others may occur at peak sales times such as during the back-to-school season, according to Grom.

"The additional Best Price Fridays equates to adding promotions and is a step away from the company's three kinds of pricing strategy, suggesting that the company is willing to forgo its original thinking," Grom wrote.

In an interview with CNBC on Tuesday, Ackman, JCPenney's largest shareholder, said he thought the company was in the process of turning itself around, but the process can be slow and painful.

The long lead times that are required to order merchandise make it difficult to change a strategy abruptly. Add that to the even more difficult task of communicating the complex message of a new pricing strategy to consumers, and the risks are even greater.

While Ackman's comments expressed confidence in Johnson's strategy, Grom's report raises some questions about it.

During "Best Price Friday" events, certain products are marked down, and the lower prices stay in effect until the product sells out.