Archive for December 9th, 2008

Let’s get some accountability … Ask your Congressman to put his "you-know-whats" on the table if he votes for the bailout … Better yet, demand it !

December 9, 2008

Ken’s Take: All of these bailouts are flat out nuts.  The worst is the seemingly inevitable tossing of money down the Detroit sink hole.  There is no chance whatsoever that Detroit get on the road to prosperity.  They can’t compete with a $1,500 or more cost disadvantage on every car sold, and the politicos are determined to patronize the UAW. Getting rid of senior management bonuses and corporate planes doesn’t even qualify as rounding error.  A fundamental restructuring of overhead costs (i.e. massive white collar layoffs) and a competitive labor agreement are required.  Neither will happen. If ever there were a case of putting good money after bad, this is it.  No government loans will ever be repaid — either the companies won’t have the wherewithal to repay or the loans will be forgiven by Congress if the companies act like they’re doing something green.

To vent my frustrations, I emailed my Congressman — asking him to make a simple pledge to the dwindling number of taxpayers.  I know it won’t change anything, but I felt better.  You should try it.

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Congressional Accountabilty Pledge 

Dear Mr. Congressman:

Stop wasting my tax dollars.

There is no chance that the Detroit 3 will repay bailout loans made to them.

If you vote affirmatively to approve any bailout loans, in any form, to any or all of the Detroit 3 automakers, you should accept personal accountability for your vote and make a binding, irrevocable public commitment to resign your government position on January 1, 2011 if the loans have not been repaid to the government in full by then, regardless of circumstances.

Period.

Your’s truly,

One of a dwindling number of taxpayers

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To email your Congressional Representative:
https://writerep.house.gov/writerep/welcome.shtml 

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From the folks who want to micro-manage Detroit: 3 years late and 134% over budget … geez.

December 9, 2008

Three years behind schedule and almost $360 million above budget, the Capitol Visitor Center  is to open to the public on Dec. 2.

The final cost of the project is put at $621 million, more than double the $265 million estimated cost had the center been completed on schedule in December, 2005.

Security was a key factor in the cost overruns. Congress decided to add two tunnels, one for truck deliveries and one linking the Capitol with the Library of Congress, that could also serve as emergency evacuation routes.

Then there were the usual overruns associated with a project where 9,000 workers set more than 400,000 pieces of stone, some weighing as much as 500 pounds. The excavation phase required the removal of 65,000 truckloads of dirt.Congress also approved the addition of House and Senate office space.

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Excerpted from MSNBC, “Capitol Visitor Center opens after delay, cost overrun”, Nov. 10, 2008

Full article:
 http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/27648214/ 

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If you want to be Costco, you gotta cut costs …

December 9, 2008

Excerpted from BusinessWeek, “Costco’s Artful Discounts”, by Jena McGregor, October 20, 2008

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In Costco Wholesale’s New Jersey distribution center, some 2 million rolls of paper towels recently sat stacked in a mountain of green and orange plastic. Nearby, row upon row of jumbo tissue rolls formed a wall of cushiony toilet paper.

A year ago, the space was virtually empty.

Costco’s customers have not, of course, suddenly stopped buying paper products. The 258 truckloads of Bounty and Charmin are the result of a “buy-in,” just one strategy Costco ( has been using to hold prices down amid rising costs. After Procter & Gamble announced a 6% price increase in August, Costco bought as much as it could stuff into its depots at the old rate.  “We’ll have a six-week supply when everyone else is going up in price.”

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At Costco, where more than 29 million households pay $50 to $100 a year to shop, low prices aren’t just a nice-to-have. They’re a way of life.

Not only does Costco’s famously frugal CEO James D. Sinegal cap margins at a sacrosanct 14% on branded goods, he’s constantly pushing his buyers to find creative ways to lower prices and add value while getting his managers to crank up their efficiency efforts. Besides the buy-in strategy, Costco has been redesigning product packaging to squeeze more bulky goods onto trucks and revamping processes for moving goods through its depots. 

 For one, holding prices low is the best way to protect profits: About 75% of Costco’s operating earnings come directly from membership fees, and if prices rose too quickly, some members could flee.  Costco’s reputation for bargain prices and surprise designer goods could inspire a new crop of warehouse chic devotees. 

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What Sinegal isn’t doing is wavering from the basic model that helped him  build Costco into a retail phenomenon. The company’s warehouse model relies on selling core items at rock-bottom prices while scooping up excess inventory from high-end brands. The average store does $137 million in annual sales, a volume so high that Costco turns its inventory 11.9 times a year, meaning it often sells goods before it technically has to pay its suppliers. Combine that with high-income customers—the average Costco household makes upwards of $75,000—and “what they’re doing is really high velocity retailing.”

As consumers cut back, Costco is finding more available inventory and fielding more calls from companies hungry to boost slumping sales. Lately, the loot in that treasure chest is getting even more high end. Over the last year, Versace dinnerware, Waterford crystal, and pastel girls’ Lilly Pulitzer dresses have all made their way into Costco’s stores. “Their ability to sell stuff is staggering.”

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With about 4000 SKUs, compared to 5300 at Sam’s Club and 40,000 at an average grocery store, Costco’s pared-down approach can make vendors more willing to cut them a deal.

The limited SKU count also helps to drive impulse shopping and remind customers that Costco doesn’t stock everything. “In a tough economy, the ability to change your assortment towards products that are selling more is a huge advantage  …If the item isn’t a value anymore, or isn’t generating the sales hurdles, it’ll be deleted.”  This holiday season, for example, almost all of Costco’s Christmas lights will be light-emitting diode because of the demand for energy-efficient bulbs. Regional food buyers also have significant sway to reflect local tastes.

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Costco has even gotten vendors to redesign product packages to fit more items on a pallet, the wooden platforms it uses to ship and display its goods. Putting cashews into square containers instead of round ones will decrease the number of pallets shipped by 24,000 this year, cutting the number of trucks by 600. By reshaping everything from laundry detergent buckets to milk jugs, Costco has needed 200,000 fewer pallets a year overall.

Sinegal acknowledges that he can’t hold back the cost increases forever. “The biggest concern to me is that we lose our way and start thinking it doesn’t matter if you charge another dime or another dollar or another hundred dollars,” he says. “Without those disciplines, we don’t have anything.”

Edit by DAF

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Full article:
http://www.businessweek.com/magazine/content/08_42/b4104058856320.htm

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