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Tag Archives: Inventory
Auto supply shortages in the US and impact
An article in the Wall Street Journal (September 3,2013) describes supply constraints faced by US auto dealers for cars made by Nissan, Ford, Toyota and Honda. Dealers report having significantly lower inventories, one car instead of the normal 15 in … Continue reading
Posted in Operations Management, Service Operations, Supply Chain Issues
Tagged automobiles, Capacity, Consumers, Inventory, Retail, Risk, Supply Chain
1 Comment
Will shuffling aluminum ingots between warehouses increase commodity prices ?
An article in the New York Times (July 21, 2013) claims that commodity traders, who have purchased large stocks of aluminum ingots, but are required to ship out from warehouses at a rate of 3,000 tons. But these traders are … Continue reading
Posted in Global Contexts, Operations Management, Supply Chain Issues
Tagged Cost, Global, Inventory, Risk, Suppliers, warehouse
1 Comment
The Thai mountain of rice inventory and global supply chain worries
An article in the Financial Times (July 18, 2013) describes the impact of the 50% price premium offered by the Thai government to rice farmers that last few years, leading to a drop in Thai rice exports and a surge … Continue reading
Posted in Global Contexts, Operations Management, Supply Chain Issues
Tagged Consumers, Cost, Farmers, Global, Imports, India, Inventory, rice, Suppliers, Supply Chain, Thailand, Vietnam
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Slower growth, higher margins as Amazon.com plays middleman
An article in the Wall Street Journal (April 26,2013) describes Amazon.com’s growth as lowing, from 34% last year to 22% for the same quarter this year, while margins increased by 33% to 26.6%. The author claims the slowdown is the … Continue reading
Posted in Operations Management, Supply Chain Issues
Tagged competition, Cost, Ecommerce, Growth, Inventory, Margins, Risk, Supply Chain
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Why did J.C.Penney’s stable pricing not work ?
An article in the New York Times (April 14,2013) describes the consumer experience at retailers such as J.C.Penney and the need to enjoy the sale and anchor the value of product sold. J.C.Penney’s attempt to reduce sale items, reduce average … Continue reading
Posted in Operations Management, Service Operations, Supply Chain Issues
Tagged Capacity, Consumers, Cost, Inventory, Loyal Customers, Margins, Retail, Risk, Supply Chain
1 Comment
The impact of sequestration on US supply chains
An article in Bloombergbusinessweek (March 11, 2013) describes the impact of the US government sequester on food and transport. Food inspector cutbacks means that meat, poultry and egg processors may have to cut back operations as the inspectors are required … Continue reading
Posted in Global Contexts, Operations Management, Supply Chain Issues
Tagged Cost, Global, Imports, Inventory, manufacturing, sequester, Service, Suppliers, Supply Chain, Survival
1 Comment
The Mad Max Economy and supply chains
An article in the New York Times (November 11,2012) describes the Mad Max Economy that focuses on the impact of bad events such as Hurricane Sandy – when generators,kerosene heaters, radios, batteries, candles and industrial fans see demands soar. But … Continue reading
The retail supply chain impact of Hurricane Sandy
An article in the New York Times (November 4, 2012) describes the impact of hurricane Sandy on the retail supply chain, action taken by companies and the possible consequences. With fuel supply shortages, FedEx started using fuel tankers to supply … Continue reading
Can omni channel marketing help brick and mortar retailers compete this Christmas ?
An article in Bloombergbusinessweek (November 5,2012) describes a decision by Target, Macy’s and Nordstrom to match online prices to compete gainst Amazon, Gilt and Ebay. Offering same day delivery from store inventory, choosing unique items only made for specific retailers … Continue reading
Posted in Ecommerce, Operations Management, Service Operations, Supply Chain Issues
Tagged Consumers, Cost, Ecommerce, Efficiency, Infrastructure, Inventory, Retail, Service, Suppliers, Supply Chain
3 Comments
Hurricane Sandy, New Jersey ports and retail supply chain impact
An article in the Wall Street Journal (November 3, 2012) describes power supply issues at the ports in New Jersey causing diversions of inbound ships to Norfolk and other locations. But shipping to Dubai from New York costs $ 3000 … Continue reading
Posted in Global Contexts, Operations Management, Supply Chain Issues
Tagged Capacity, Cost, exports, Global, hurricane, Imports, Inventory, manufacturing, Margins, ports, Retail, ships, Suppliers
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