Discount store | |
Industry | Retail |
Fate | Liquidation; many stores rebranded as Target |
Founded | 1954 | in San Diego
Founder | Sol Price |
Defunct | 1982 |
Headquarters | San Diego, California |
Number of locations
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Area served
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Products | clothing, footwear, housewares, sporting goods, hardware, toys, electronics, food |
FedMart was a chain of discount department stores started by Sol Price, who later founded Price Club. His first location in San Diego, California was in a converted airport hangar. It was originally a discount department store open to government employees, who paid a membership fee of $2 per family. FedMart's first year was highly successful. Over the next 20 years Fedmart grew to include 45 stores in a chain that generated more than $300 million in annual sales. Soon the business took off, expanding to several states in the Southwest United States. Many stores were previous White Front or Two Guys locations. Price later sold two-thirds of the chain to Hugo Mann, a German retail chain, in 1975 and was forced out of his leadership position the following year. FedMart went out of business in 1982.
Sol Price began his career in the mid-1950s, when he was working as an attorney in San Diego. Fedmart began after he inherited a vacant warehouse for which he needed to find a tenant and was asked by a couple of clients to visit Los Angeles to give his opinion on an unusual business. The clients were in the wholesale jewelry business, and had been selling watches to a non-profit, member-owned retail operation in Los Angeles called Fedco. When he visited Fedco, Price noticed that its facility was similar to the warehouse he had inherited. He suggested to his clients that his building could be used for the same purpose. His clients agreed, marking the beginning of FedMart and, along with previously established Fedco from 1948, the membership club industry.
The business was begun in 1954 with a $50,000 capital investment. Price solicited the help of eight individuals who each invested $5,000 and convinced his law firm to invest the remaining $10,000. He obtained his inventory from his clients, beginning with the two jewelry wholesalers. Another client, who was in the furniture business, provided Price with a small selection of furniture. A third client sold liquor, giving Price's FedMart the odd merchandise mix of jewelry, furniture, and liquor. He opened membership to government employees of all levels—federal, state, and local. Despite the less than comprehensive selection of goods, Price's business thrived from the start, collecting $4.5 million during its first year in business, four times the total projected by Price and his investors.