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    Consumers Win Game of Chicken; 40-60% Off "Entire Store" at Some Retailers; Low Prices are Good; US Senate Economic Illiteracy

    Fri, 12/23/2011 - 14:33 EDT - Mish's Global Economic Trend Analysis
    • RDF10

    Buyer's Remorse

    I have questioned all these glowing retail sales estimates in light of Buyer's Remorse; Record Volume of Returns Before Christmas; $217 Billion Returns Expected, Up 14%.

    Retail Sales Not In Alignment With Shipping

    Moreover, stores were supposed to be run low on merchandise so they could charge full prices. Yet reported retail sales are not in alignment with truck fuel usage as noted in Ceridian Fuel Index Shows Christmas Doesn't Come Early to the Trucking Industry

    However, the Ceridian index is in essential alignment with with energy usage as noted on December 9 in US Petroleum and Gasoline Usage Plunges Last 5 Weeks Compared to Prior Years

    Consumers Win Game of Chicken

    Today we get a third piece of evidence that all is not well in retail-land. In spite of a glowing "Black Friday" reports, consumers held back and won a victory over retailers.

    This was not supposed to happen, but Retailers Are Slashing Prices Ahead of Holiday, not just select items but rather entire stores.
    Half off at the entire store at Ann Taylor. Sixty percent at Gap. Forty percent off almost everything at Abercrombie & Fitch.

    “It’s really a game of chicken,” said David Bassuk, managing director and head of the retail practice at the consultant firm AlixPartners.

    Many retailers entered the season “with pretty optimistic plans” that shoppers would rush into stores and pay full price, Mr. Bassuk said. But that did not pan out, and the final days before Christmas have retailers being “much more aggressive in terms of promotions being offered,” he said.

    Toys “R” Us announced on Thursday new deals on dozens of items for Friday and Saturday, including ‘buy one, get one half off” on popular toys like Legos. A sampling of other promotions: Up to 70 percent off toys at Amazon; up to 50 percent off gifts at Restoration Hardware; 40 percent off almost everything at American Eagle Outfitters, Talbots, Limited and Wet Seal; and 30 percent off everything at J. Crew.

    “There’s been kind of a waiting game with retailers,” Gerald L. Storch, the chief executive of Toys “R” Us, told CNBC last week. “And it looks like the consumer wins.”

    Paul Lejuez, an analyst at Nomura Equity Research, surveyed mall deals over the weekend and said he was concerned. “It looks like 40 percent is the new level you have to be at, 40 percent off, to drive traffic. Those that weren’t at that level weren’t getting their fair share,” he said.

    Going into the holiday season, inventories had grown more than three times as fast as sales at several retailers, including American Eagle Outfitters, Aéropostale, Gap Inc., Urban Outfitters, Chico’s and Talbots.

    “The inventory is worth so much less in two weeks,” said the chief executive of a retailer, who asked not to be named because he did not want to reveal his store’s strategy. “With that kind of inventory, you’ve got to get rid of it. Whatever the margin is today, it’s that much lower next week and the week after when traffic stops.” Low Prices are Good

    Low prices are good. The more the competition the better. Yet economic fools including US senators think otherwise.

    Senator Snowe Calls on Amazon to Cancel Attack on Small Businesses

    In an extremely misguided news conference Republican Senator Olympia Snowe Calls on Amazon to Cancel Attack on Small Businesses
    U.S. Senate Committee on Small Business and Entrepreneurship Ranking Member Olympia J. Snowe (R-Maine) issued the following comment regarding Amazon.com's upcoming promotion targeting small business pricing:

    Senator Snowe, said:

    "Amazon's promotion - paying consumers to visit small businesses and leave empty-handed - is an attack on Main Street businesses that employ workers in our communities. Small businesses are fighting everyday to compete with giant retailers, such as Amazon, and incentivizing consumers to spy on local shops is a bridge too far. I often tour Main Streets in cities and towns across Maine to speak directly with local business owners, and they have told me repeatedly that they rely on increased sales during the holidays to grow their businesses and create new jobs. Indeed, according to the latest NFIB Economic Trends Survey, small business owners listed "poor sales" as the top problem they face. As such, during the busiest shopping season of the year, we should remember that our local restaurants, bookshops, and hardware stores are the economic engines in our communities. I urge Amazon to cancel its planned promotion, and look for ways to partner with Main Street, not promote anti-competitive behavior that could shutter the doors of America's small businesses." Economic Idiocy at Its Finest

    Senator Snowe's message is economic idiocy at its finest. She wants everyone to pay more for merchandise to protect small businesses. For starters, people have enough problems with high gas prices, high food prices, high debt, and shrinking real wages.Consumers need to save every cent they can. Competition from Amazon is a godsend.

    Effectively Senator Snowe is asking everyone suck up to protect mom-and-pop businesses. Her message is misguided in more ways than one.

    As noted, Snowe's position is a bad bargain for consumers, regardless of whether Amazon would comply. Ironically, even if Amazon complied (Amazon won't and they shouldn't), business would not go to mom-and-pop stores but to Walmart or Target or some other firm slashing prices 40-60%.

    Need for More Amazons!

    We need more Amazons not less. Every dollar consumers save on clothing, electronics, books, etc is another dollar that can go to food, shelter, and gasoline.

    Speaking of which, more online shopping would help cut down on gasoline usage, and in case no one has noticed the world is running out of cheap energy sources.

    It is disappointing but not surprising to see such economic incompetence in the US Senate, and that is one of the reasons the US is in such a fiscal mess in the first place.

    Mike "Mish" Shedlock
    http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com
    Click Here To Scroll Thru My Recent Post ListMike "Mish" Shedlock is a registered investment advisor representative for SitkaPacific Capital Management. Sitka Pacific is an asset management firm whose goal is strong performance and low volatility, regardless of market direction.
    Visit http://www.sitkapacific.com/account_management.html to learn more about wealth management and capital preservation strategies of Sitka Pacific.

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    Related

    • Ceridian Fuel Index Shows Christmas Doesn't Come Early to the Trucking Industry

      Reported retail sales are not in alignment with truck fuel usage as reflected in the Ceridian Pulse of Commerce Index for November The Ceridian-UCLA Pulse of Commerce Index® (PCI®), issued today by the UCLA Anderson School of Management and Ceridian Corporation rose 0.1 percent in November following a 1.1 percent increase in October.

    • Ceridian Fuel Index Suggests "Recovery in Home Building has Not Yet Taken Hold"

      The Ceridian-UCLA Pulse of Commerce Index®, a real-time measure of truck fuel usage, is up this month but down in its most recent three month period according to the March Pulse of Commerce Report.

    • Buyer's Remorse; Record Volume of Returns Before Christmas; $217 Billion Returns Expected, Up 14%

      Christmas shopping is up, but so are returns, before Santa even delivers them. This is not a case of wrong size or bad color, but rather "I found a better deal or I spent too much". MSN Money says Take that back! Returns are big for the holidays

    • Holiday Retail: Will the Good Start Keep Going?

      Dr. Stephen Leeb submits:With the US economy still facing persistently high unemployment, and consumers confronting rising energy and food prices (despite the government’s published inflation readings), this year’s holiday shopping season is an important one for retailers.

    • Good News for Consumers: Holiday Sales Barely Rise; Worst Shopping Season Since 2008

      I am always suspicious of early holiday season reports of glowing sales around Thanksgiving and especially Black Friday. Then, right after Christmas I always wonder if retailers lowball estimates so they can beat-the-street on same-store-sales reports. That said, because of the souring economy I am not surprised by reports of Lackluster Holiday Sales.

    • More retail casualties as Christmas trading unwinds, says Begbies Traynor

      The business recovery group is anticipating more retail casualties as Christmas trading unwinds. It estimates that almost 140, mainly small retailers, are in a financially critical situation at a time when they should have been at their trading peak, reports The Telegraph.

    • Ceridian Fuel Index Up 0.3 Percent in March, Down 2.2 Percent From Year Ago

      The UCLA Ceridian Pulse of Commerce Index based on real-time truck fuel usage rose slightly in March.

    • Does Black Friday Arrive at Midnight or is this the Death of Black Friday?

      The day after Thanksgiving is traditionally known as "Black Friday" because that is when Christmas season starts and many stores go into the green for the year.However, in recent years, stores opened earlier and earlier, with people lining up at 4:00AM to ensure being the first in the store for "hot specials" or items expected to be in short supply. On occasion, people have been trampled to death in the mad rush to get into stores.This Thanksgiving, many stores have pushed up the clock to open at Midnight instead of 5 or 6 AM.

    • Black Friday/Holiday Bargains May Harm Gap Stock

      Trefis submits: Gap (GPS), a leading global specialty retailer, reported its 3QFY10 results last Friday.

    • Concerns for Gap Stock on Holiday Bargains

      Trefis submits: Gap (GPS), a leading global specialty retailer, reported its 3QFY10 results last Friday.

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