Browse the full insider trade history of Tuesday Morning Corp/de, a publicly traded company based in United States. Shares are quoted on US US, under the authority of SEC (Form 4). Operating in the Retail & Commerce sector, Tuesday Morning Corp/de has recorded 52 public disclosures. The latest transaction was disclosed on 23 May 2022 (Retenue fiscale). Among the most active insiders: Hand Fred. The full history is accessible without an account.
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Tuesday Morning Corp/DE (TUEM) is an American off-price home-goods retailer historically focused on value-oriented merchandise for the home. The company was founded in 1974 by Lloyd Ross. Its core concept was to source and sell a rotating assortment of discounted products in dedicated stores, including home décor, bedding, bath textiles, small furniture, kitchenware, gifts, seasonal items, and outdoor/lifestyle accessories. The brand was built around the idea of offering recognizable products at prices generally below those of specialty chains, department stores, catalogs, and online retailers. From a geographic standpoint, Tuesday Morning operated exclusively in the United States and for many years maintained a multi-state store footprint. Its principal executive offices were in Dallas, Texas, which became closely associated with the brand’s identity. The company is incorporated in Delaware. For equity investors, the market history matters: TUEM traded on the Nasdaq Capital Market before the company announced a voluntary delisting, with trading suspended and the stock delisted in January 2023. That makes Tuesday Morning a special situation rather than a conventional listed retail name, and SEC filings are therefore more relevant for corporate events and insider activity than for ongoing public-market valuation. Competitively, Tuesday Morning sat in a crowded off-price and discount retail landscape. Its niche was narrower than broad-line discounters because it concentrated on home products rather than apparel. The model relied on bargain hunting, opportunistic sourcing, and a “treasure-hunt” shopping experience that could attract repeat traffic when inventory was fresh and pricing was compelling. At the same time, this positioning also left the business exposed to intense competition from other off-price players, home retailers, big-box chains, marketplaces, and shifting consumer preferences. Over time, the company faced structural pressure, including store closures, operational restructuring, and bankruptcy proceedings under Chapter 11. In recent communications, Tuesday Morning has continued to operate as an online brand, with its website offering categories such as furniture, bedding, bath, home décor, rugs, kitchen, outdoor, fragrance, luggage, pets, electronics, clearance, and seasonal products. For French-speaking investors in Europe, the key takeaway is that Tuesday Morning remains a recognizable U.S. retail brand with deep historical roots and a clear home-focused value proposition, but its public-equity story is now largely defined by delisting, restructuring, and a transition away from the traditional listed-company model on the United States Nasdaq market.