KEY POINTS
  • Convenience store chain 7-Eleven has slashed roughly 880 corporate jobs in the United States.
  • The eliminations come roughly a year after it completed its $21 billion acquisition of rival C-store business Speedway.
  • The cuts were of certain jobs in the company's Irving, Texas, and Enon, Ohio, support centers, as well as field support roles, according to a company spokesperson.

Convenience store chain 7-Eleven has cut roughly 880 corporate jobs in the United States, CNBC has learned, roughly a year after it completed its $21 billion acquisition of rival C-store and gas station business Speedway.

7-Eleven is owned by the Japanese retail conglomerate Seven & i Holdings, which came under pressure earlier this year from the San Francisco-based investment company ValueAct Capital to consider strategic alternatives. ValueAct had been urging Seven & i to narrow its focus to 7-Eleven, and it backed a new slate of directors on the Japanese company's board.