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Albuquerque, New Mexico supermarket 🇺🇸🛒❤️

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#Albuquerque #NewMexico #Supermarket #GroceryStore #FoodMarket #Market #Marketplace #RetailStore #RetailMarket #GroceryMarket #Hypermarket #ConvenienceStore #FoodRetail #StoreLayout #Planograms #ShelfPlanogram

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Italian Retail Wine Sales Drop 2.4% in Third Quarter as Market Fatigue Sets In E-commerce emerges as the only growth channel while price sensitivity and promotions shape consumer choices across Italy

Italian Retail Wine Sales Drop 2.4% in Third Quarter as Market Fatigue Sets In #ItalianWine #WineSales #Ecommerce #RetailMarket #WineIndustry

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December is crucial for Lebanese retailers, contributing 40% of yearly sales. Despite economic hurdles, sectors like gifts and food are set to benefit from the festive spirit and local initiatives, offering optimism for stability.

#Lebanon #RetailMarket #HolidaySeason

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Lululemon hit with wave of downgrades as U.S. sales weaken, tariff hit deepens Investing.com -- Lululemon Athletica was downgraded by Wall Street brokerages after its earnings results and outlook of slowing U.S. sales, softer growth in Canada and China, and a steeper-than-expected hit from U.S. tariffs. William Blair lowered the stock to Market Perform, citing uncertainty over the timing of a U.S. turnaround, the loss of tariff exemptions, and emerging macro weakness in China. The broker said it now expects the company to “lose a year of earnings” Evercore ISI also downgraded Lululemon to In Line from Outperform, slashing its price target to $180. It said U.S. sales trends worsened through the summer, Canada growth slowed, China guidance was trimmed, and tariff costs tied to the end of the “de minimis” import rule were far larger than expected. The broker warned margins are at risk of further compression in 2025 and 2026. Oppenheimer moved the stock to Perform from Outperform and withdrew its $500 target, noting merchandising shortfalls are still hurting conversion rates. TAG likewise cut its rating to Market Perform and reduced its price target to $200 from $360, flagging disappointing U.S. sales in core categories, a reduced full-year revenue and earnings outlook, and greater-than-anticipated tariff pressure. Lululemon’s second-quarter report showed flat U.S. sales, slower growth in Canada, trimmed China expectations, and a lowered full-year outlook. The company’s push to revive demand with new product sets is unlikely to have an impact until 2026, leaving few near-term catalysts for the stock. 3rd party Ad. Not an offer or recommendation by Investing.com. See disclosure here or remove ads. Most investors will find it hard to answer that question with total confidence. Short of a guarantee, which no one can give you, the most successful traders stick to proven best practices without letting hype or hyper-vigilance take over their better judgment. But that doesn't mean you can't use smart shortcuts. If you're considering LULU, try chatting with WarrenAI, our powerful AI financial assistant. It's just like ChatGPT for investors, but with access to 10 years of company data, a built-in screener, Wall Street analysts' reports, and earnings call transcripts for real-time, vetted insights. Even if you end up going with your gut feeling, at least you'll know why.

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Is Target the next Best Buy? Investing.com -- Target may be on the verge of its own turnaround story if Chief Executive Brian Cornell steps down in September and a new leader steps in. Investors will be looking for a fresh strategy to reverse falling sales, restore customer appeal and compete more effectively with Walmart (NYSE:WMT) and Amazon (NASDAQ:AMZN). Target is losing market share in core categories, struggling in online business and there is a consumer perceptions that its prices are higher than rivals. These are similar to what Best Buy (NYSE:BBY) faced a decade ago when many thought it was headed for “death by Amazon.” Best Buy’s revival under Hubert Joly between 2012 and 2019 had electronics retailer refreshed its stores, invested in its staff, committed to price matching, improved its website, cut costs and closed weaker locations. Most importantly, Joly set a clear vision for the company’s purpose and hired the right leaders to deliver it. For Target, a new management team could take similar steps. That could mean using more private-label goods to narrow the price gap with rivals, trimming expenses to fund price cuts, improving the online shopping experience to reduce profit losses, and rethinking its store footprint. A sharper focus on returns on invested capital could help guide decisions. "A new management, especially one with an outside perspective, could be a positive catalyst," analyst at Bernstein said. The bigger question is whether Target should invest heavily in a Walmart-like e-commerce supply chain, which may not pay off without greater scale. Without that, online sales may continue to erode margins unless the company finds a new approach. Better economic conditions could give Target more breathing room, but the company still needs to stop losing market share before any turnaround can take hold. For now, the outcome remains uncertain. Don't miss out on the next big opportunity! Stay ahead of the curve with ProPicks AI – 6 model portfolios fueled by AI stock picks with a stellar performance this year... In 2024 alone, ProPicks AI identified 2 stocks that surged over 150%, 4 additional stocks that leaped over 30%, and 3 more that climbed over 25%. That's an impressive track record. With portfolios tailored for Dow stocks, S&P stocks, Tech Stocks, and Mid Cap stocks, you can explore various wealth-building strategies. So if AMZN is on your watchlist, it could be very wise to know whether or not it made the ProPicks AI lists.

Click Subscribe #Target #BestBuy #Investing #RetailMarket #BusinessNews

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Wary of sticker shock, retailers clash with brands on price hikes By Helen Reid LONDON (Reuters) -Caught between rising costs from tariffs and belt-tightening consumers, big retailers are clashing with the producers of consumer brands such as Nivea-maker Beiersdorf (ETR:BEIG) and brewer Heineken (AS:HEIN), as they look to avoid sticker shock that could hurt sales. The disputes - which have dented some brands’ sales - underscore the challenge for consumer goods makers and sellers, with inflation and tariffs pushing up input costs and price spikes in commodities such as coffee. While pricing talks have never been easy, tariffs are escalating already high food inflation since the pandemic, making grocery bills more contentious and political as consumers grapple with a cost-of-living crisis. "We all should be very well aware of consumer budgets," Frans Muller, CEO of supermarket company Ahold Delhaize, which owns U.S. chains Food Lion, Hannaford, and Stop & Shop, told Reuters on Wednesday. He said conversations with consumer goods companies over pricing were "tight," adding that the industry’s focus was on increasing sales volumes rather than increasing revenue by hiking prices. "That is the wrong way of supporting customers and the wrong way of growing the business itself." Ahold has in-house teams that track commodity, energy, and labour costs, and own-brand products it can compare with to establish whether price increases demanded by consumer brands are justified or not, Muller said. On the other side of the equation are the brands, facing higher costs that are squeezing margins. Beiersdorf CEO Vincent Warnery said on Wednesday that retailers in key markets, including Germany and France, had pushed back strongly in price talks last quarter, not only refusing price increases but asking for price reductions, and pulling products from shelves. Beiersdorf eventually agreed to a 2.6% rise, Warnery said, but delistings of some products by retailers knocked two percentage points off its sales growth in Europe in the second quarter. "There will be a lot of price changes pushed forward by consumer brands, some will be accepted by retailers and some will not," said Bobby Gibbs, a Dallas-based partner at Oliver Wyman who advises retailers and consumer goods firms. Manufacturers will find it easier to push higher prices through on products where there is brand loyalty and fewer strong private label alternatives, Gibbs said. Reuters’ global tariff tracker shows at least 102 out of nearly 300 companies monitored by the tracker have announced price hikes in response to the trade war, with about 41 of them in the consumer sector. As well as tariffs, other factors like the cost of capital and labour, and commodity prices in the case of coffee and chocolate, are pushing prices up on certain products, Gibbs said. Trump has said the tariffs counter persistent U.S. trade imbalances and declining U.S. manufacturing power, and that the moves will bring jobs and investment to the nation. MORE PRICE HIKES AHEAD More price hikes are planned, particularly in the U.S. Tide detergent maker Procter & Gamble (NYSE:PG) last week said it was raising prices on about a quarter of its products in the U.S. by a mid-single-digit percentage as part of efforts to mitigate the cost of higher tariffs on imported goods. That will affect pricing at Walmart (NYSE:WMT), Target, and other stores. As talks heat up, more retailers could pull branded products temporarily as a negotiating tactic, as Ahold’s Albert Heijn chain did this year in a dispute over price hikes by coffee roaster JDE Peet’s. Dutch brewer Heineken last week said its beer sales were dented by a price dispute with European retailers. "Many retailers are getting more sophisticated in how they can measure product switching ... so they’re willing to be bolder on delistings because they’re able to protect sales and margin more than they would have in the past," said Gibbs. In Europe, retailers are joining forces to increase their clout in pricing talks. Carrefour (EPA:CARR) said last month it had created a new European buying alliance called Concordis, along with rival group Coopérative U, and is in advanced discussions with other European retailers to expand the alliance. Supermarkets are developing more own-brand alternatives to big-name brands. Ahold has introduced 300 new own-brand products this year in its U.S. chains, and sales growth in those has outpaced the rest of the store, it said. "We see some level of pressure to drive trade down because of price promotional behaviour," he said, referring to consumers swapping to lower-priced products, adding the market would remain "volatile and challenging". Don't miss out on the next big opportunity! Stay ahead of the curve with ProPicks AI – 6 model portfolios fueled by AI stock picks with a stellar performance this year... In 2024 alone, ProPicks AI identified 2 stocks that surged over 150%, 4 additional stocks that leaped over 30%, and 3 more that climbed over 25%. That's an impressive track record. With portfolios tailored for Dow stocks, S&P stocks, Tech Stocks, and Mid Cap stocks, you can explore various wealth-building strategies. So if HEIN is on your watchlist, it could be very wise to know whether or not it made the ProPicks AI lists.

Click Subscribe #RetailMarket #PriceHikes #ConsumerGoods #Inflation #BrandStrategy

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Chinese online retail giant JD.com is reportedly in advanced talks over a potential acquisition of Media Markt and Saturn, two of Germany’s leading electronics chains. en.aseantoday.info - tinyurl.com/yc83k82v #Asia #Retailmarket #China #Beijing #JD.com #MediaMarkt #Saturn #MediaMarktSaturn

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Click Subscribe #GoldmanSachs #Moncler #RetailMarket #InvestmentNews #LuxuryRetail

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Price wars grip China as deflation deepens, $30 for a luxury Coach bag? BEIJING/SHANGHAI (Reuters) -Chinese energy sector worker Mandy Li likes to treat herself to a luxury brand handbag once in a while. But since her state-owned employer cut her wage by 10% and the properties her family owns lost half their value, she only buys second-hand ones. "I’m cutting down on large expenditures," said 28-year-old Li, while browsing for items in Beijing’s Super Zhuanzhuan second-hand luxury items store that opened in May. "The economy is definitely in a downturn," she said, adding: "My family’s wealth has shrunk by a lot" due to the property crisis China has been grappling with since 2021. As deflationary pressures mount in the world’s second-largest economy, consumer behaviour is changing in ways that could lead to further downward pressure on prices, raising concerns that deflation could become entrenched, posing more headaches for China’s policymakers. Data showed on Monday that consumer prices fell 0.1% in May from a year earlier, with price wars raging in a number of sectors, from autos to e-commerce to coffee amid concerns about oversupply and sluggish household demand. "We still think persistent overcapacity will keep China in deflation both this year and next," Capital Economics said in a research note. New businesses are seeking success by targeting penny-pinchers, from restaurants selling 3 yuan ($0.40) breakfast menus to supermarkets offering flash sales four times a day. But this trend is worrying economists who see price wars as ultimately unsustainable as losing firms may have to close and people may lose their jobs, fuelling further deflation. Consumer price sensitivities’ have accelerated growth in the Chinese second-hand luxury market since the pandemic, with annual growth rates surpassing 20% in 2023, according to an industry report by Zhiyan Consulting from last year. But that growth has also led to a spike in the volumes of such items available for sale - which is noticeable in the level of discounts on offer. Some new stores, including Super Zhuanzhuan, are offering items at discounts of up to 90% of their original price, compared with industry standards of 30-40% in recent years. Discounts of 70% or more are also now common on large second-hand platforms, such as Xianyu, Feiyu, Ponhu and Plum. "In the current economic environment we are seeing more existing luxury consumers shifting to the second-hand market," said Lisa Zhang, an expert with Daxue Consulting, a market research and strategy firm focusing on China. But sellers "have more discounts and it’s due to more competition." At Super Zhuanzhuan, a green, carryall Christie handbag model by Coach (NYSE:TPR), which its first owner bought for 3,260 yuan ($454) can be re-purchased for 219 yuan ($30). A 2,200 yuan Givenchy G Cube necklace can be found for 187 yuan. "Year-to-year, it’s like 20% growth in the number of sellers, but the buyers’ numbers are pretty much stable," said the founder of another second-hand luxury business in China, asking for anonymity to speak candidly about the state of the industry. "The middle class - their salary has really decreased. The economy is the number one reason we’re seeing these trends." He said big cities such as Shanghai and Beijing have enough buyers to accommodate new market entrants, but elsewhere in China there isn’t any room for more. "I would expect the majority of the stores which have recently opened up will actually close," he said. University professor Riley Chang was browsing through Super Zhuanzhuan not because she wanted to buy anything new - she hasn’t spent money on big brands since the pandemic - but because she wanted to see what the market was if she sold any of her own possessions. She wasn’t happy with what she saw. "I’ve been to several major second-hand luxury stores in Beijing and Shanghai and they all try to push your price as low as possible," said Chang. With valuations skyrocketing in 2024, many investors are uneasy putting more money into stocks. Sure, there are always opportunities in the stock market – but finding them feels more difficult now than a year ago. Unsure where to invest next? One of the best ways to discover new high-potential opportunities is to look at the top performing portfolios this year. ProPicks AI offers 6 model portfolios from Investing.com which identify the best stocks for investors to buy right now. For example, ProPicks AI found 9 overlooked stocks that jumped over 25% this year alone. The new stocks that made the monthly cut could yield enormous returns in the coming years. Is TPR one of them?

Click Subscribe. #ChinaEconomy #Deflation #PriceWars #LuxuryGoods #RetailMarket

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U.K. grocery market maintains rational pricing, Tesco reinforces dominance TSCDYTSCO OCDO hereremove ads Risk Disclosure: Trading in financial instruments and/or cryptocurrencies involves high risks including the risk of losing some, or all, of your investment amount, and may not be suitable for all investors. Prices of cryptocurrencies are extremely volatile and may be affected by external factors such as financial, regulatory or political events. Trading on margin increases the financial risks. Before deciding to trade in financial instrument or cryptocurrencies you should be fully informed of the risks and costs associated with trading the financial markets, carefully consider your investment objectives, level of experience, and risk appetite, and seek professional advice where needed. Fusion Media would like to remind you that the data contained in this website is not necessarily real-time nor accurate. The data and prices on the website are not necessarily provided by any market or exchange, but may be provided by market makers, and so prices may not be accurate and may differ from the actual price at any given market, meaning prices are indicative and not appropriate for trading purposes. Fusion Media and any provider of the data contained in this website will not accept liability for any loss or damage as a result of your trading, or your reliance on the information contained within this website. It is prohibited to use, store, reproduce, display, modify, transmit or distribute the data contained in this website without the explicit prior written permission of Fusion Media and/or the data provider. All intellectual property rights are reserved by the providers and/or the exchange providing the data contained in this website. Fusion Media may be compensated by the advertisers that appear on the website, based on your interaction with the advertisements or advertisers.

Click Subscribe #UKGroceryMarket #Tesco #GroceryShopping #RationalPricing #RetailMarket

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لوکل مارکیٹ اور ریٹیل مارکیٹ پر ہمارا کوئی کنٹرول نہیں ہے، پارلیمانی سیکرٹری تجارت کا جواب

مزید پڑھیے: www.aaj.tv/news/30461496/

#AajNews #WomenClothingPrices #NationalAssembly #Inflation #RetailMarket #LocalMarket #ParliamentDebate

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4 Stocks to Sell—and 1 to Buy—for a Retail Reckoning - Barron's 4 Stocks to Sell—and 1 to Buy—for a Retail Reckoning  Barron's

Click Subscribe #Stocks #Investment #RetailMarket #Finance #StockMarket

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🛍️ Kohl’s (KSS) warns of challenges ahead, as its latest guidance signals uncertainty in the retail sector. 📉 What should investors expect next? Read more: bit.ly/3FzrNEN #Kohls #KSS #RetailMarket #Investing

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After 2020 Ban, Ambani Brings China's Shein Back To India - IndiaWest Journal News After 2020 Ban, Ambani Brings China's Shein Back To India.

After 2020 Ban, Ambani Brings China's Shein Back To India

Full Story- indiawest.com/after-2020-b...

#headlines #breakingnews #trendingnews #viralnews #indiawest #news #Ambani #Shein #India #FashionIndustry #Ecommerce #GlobalTrade #BusinessNews #RetailMarket

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