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Strategies & Market Trends : Can you beat 50% per month? -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Smiling Bob who wrote (6390)10/5/2003 1:51:57 PM
From: Smiling Bob  Respond to of 19256
 
Economy on the rebound.
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Factory Closures Devastate U.S. Towns
Saturday October 4, 3:42 pm ET
By Andrea Hopkins

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - When Jerry Wilmouth moved to Galesburg, Illinois, five years ago, everyone told him to get a job at Maytag Corp.'s (NYSE:MYG - News) refrigerator plant. Maytag paid the best, they said, and the 50-year-old factory was the lifeblood of the city.
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Now, Wilmouth and 379 others are spending their first week of life after Maytag -- the first of 1,600 workers to be laid off between now and the end of 2004, when the plant closes for good and Maytag moves the work to Mexico.

The 46-year-old father of three said he has little hope of finding work in Galesburg to match the $15 an hour he made on the assembly line, and now his 17-year-old daughter is thinking about joining the army to pay for college.

"Every decent-paying job in the area is going, going or already gone and I'm faced with taking a job for $6, $7, $8 an hour," said Wilmouth.

The loss of 2.5 million manufacturing jobs since January 2001 has devastated factory towns across middle America, where once-dominant local employers are pulling up stakes and heading to Mexico or Asia in search of lower costs and cheaper labor.

The exodus of 1,600 Maytag jobs is only the tip of the iceberg in Galesburg. Everyone from sheet metal suppliers to local firms providing toilet paper and light bulbs rely on the plant for business in the town of about 33,700 about 150 miles southwest of Chicago

According to a study by the Institute for Rural Affairs at Western Illinois University, the Maytag plant is the dominant industry for nine surrounding counties. For every Maytag worker laid off, nearly three other jobs will disappear as the loss of so many high-paying jobs ripples through the economy -- taking total jobs losses to 4,166.

"Never in my life have I lived in a place that is sort of going backwards like this," said Chris Merrett, an associate professor at the institute.

"Along with agriculture, this kind of manufacturing was the economic base and those jobs are going elsewhere."

PINK SLIP DREAMS

Since the end of the 2001 U.S. recession, job losses have ballooned in many sectors despite economic growth. This "jobless recovery" has drained one in six factory jobs, squeezing many of the nation's more highly paid workers.

Manufacturing pays an average $45,580 in annual wages -- about 17 percent higher than the average U.S. job, according to the National Association of Manufacturers (News - Websites).

The layoffs have carved a swath of unemployment through the Midwest, where cornfields made way for factories after World War II as industry shifted from big cities to comparatively low-cost rural areas.

In Wichita, Kansas, some 11,000 aerospace workers have lost their jobs since 2001 as employers outsourced both parts supply and assembly overseas, sideswiping the local economy.

Carolyn Summers, a 41-year-old mother of two was laid off from her job at Boeing Co.'s Witchita plant (NYSE:BA - News) two years ago, and she mourns the devastation she has seen.

"I see so many people that I worked with at Boeing, and they're still unemployed just as I am," said Summers. She blames free trade and President Bush for allowing U.S. companies to outsource overseas.

"I wish the government would really see what it is doing to the American people. We built this country, and I feel that they're letting it turn into almost a ghost town," she said.

A single mother, Summers most regrets the impact the loss her $18.67-an-hour job has had on her 21-year-old daughter, who was away at college studying nursing when the pink slip came. She now works at Wal-Mart to pay for her part-time studies at Wichita's local community college.

"That's one dream you're always saying -- 'My child is going to go to college'," lamented Summers. "All my American dreams just seem to (have been) written on a pink slip."

biz.yahoo.com

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To: Smiling Bob who wrote (6390)11/5/2003 10:57:03 AM
From: Smiling Bob  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 19256
 
Australia just raised lending rates. Who's next?
Oct retail sales down. How can that be? Economy is booming, is it not?
KSS will get hit hard this season
F and TIF 46.87 bid (nice short)as well
Message 19465419

Dow Jones Business News
October Retail Sales Seen Weaker Than In Recent Past
Tuesday November 4, 12:43 pm ET
By James Covert, Of DOW JONES NEWSWIRES

NEW YORK (Dow Jones)--Summer shopping sprees that sizzled through September fizzled in October, as bouts of warm weather distracted consumers from fall fashions.
October had been a blow-out month last year, as a stretch of persistently warm weather finally turned cold, releasing pent-up demand for sweaters, jackets and other outerwear. But this year, a back-to-school season fueled by tax cuts, and capped by cold weather in September that jump-started fall apparel sales, gave way to a lukewarm October.

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Aside from spurring clearance sales that may limit upside to retailers' third- quarter earnings, the recent sluggishness has fueled a lively debate about the prospects for the holiday season. Pessimists see evidence of lost momentum and a lackluster Christmas, while a chorus of optimists perceive a mere pause.

"The fundamentals in the economy are improving, but spending's not higher every month," says Michael P. Niemira, an economist at Bank of Tokyo-Mitsubishi Ltd. in New York. "The pause might be just what you need at this time of the year - if the consumer holds back a little bit in October, maybe there's a chance they'll spend a little more during the holidays."

Whatever the cause and its implications for the future, the slowdown will make for some ugly numbers when most major retail chains report monthly sales on Thursday. Niemira expects that an index of 79 retailers tracked by his bank will post a 2.5% to 3% gain in same-store sales, or sales at stores open at least a year - a key measure of retail performance.

That result would fall well short of the 5.9% increase the index posted in September. But like many other retail watchers, Niemira figures that shoppers are simply taking a breather. He's sticking to his initial forecast that holiday comparable sales will increase 4.5% - a forecast that he calls conservative.

Discounters Strong, Even In Apparel

As usual, big discounters are expected to post the strongest results. Still nervous about their jobs despite other positive signs in the economy, consumers continue to hunt for bargains and stick to the essentials. Wal-Mart Stores Inc. (NYSE:WMT - News; WMT) is expected to be a primary beneficiary of the trend.

Still, Wal-Mart said last week that upside to its forecast of a 3% to 5% same- store sales gain could be limited by weather and calendar-related issues. Bill Dreher, an analyst at Deutsche Bank Securities in New York, anticipates that Wal-Mart's October same-store sales rose 4%.

Most analysts see continued difficulty for apparel retailers, and Dreher sees a trend that's benefiting apparel sellers on the low end. He notes that VF Corp. (VFC) said last month that recent sales of its Lee, Wrangler and Riders jeans have beaten expectations, and that its sales at Wal-Mart and Target Corp. (NYSE:TGT - News) have been brisk.

On the other hand, Jones Apparel Group , which supplies middle-brow department stores including J.C. Penney Co. (NYSE:JCP - News) , Kohl's Corp. (NYSE:KSS - News) and Sears, Roebuck & Co. (NYSE:S - News) , said last month it remains "extremely cautious" heading into the holidays.

Dreher expects Sears and Penney to report October same-store sales roughly in line with their forecasts for flat results. However, he anticipates that Kohl's will miss its plan for flat October same-store sales compared with the 18.3% surge the company posted a year earlier. Dogged by warm weather, competition, and new merchandise and promotional strategies that are confusing its customers, same-store sales at Kohl's will fall 6%, Dreher says.

Late-Month Improvements At Gap

Once again, the shopping mall will be a mixed bag. At Gap Inc. , "the excitement in the stores was lacking at the start of the month," Merrill Lynch & Co. analyst Mark Friedman said in a Monday research note. But around the third week of the month, "it all changed."

The first holiday merchandise at Gap stores shows appealing colors. Banana Republic's latest goods look strong, especially in accessories. And Old Navy (NYSE:GPS - News) is "still a bit basic but saleable and colorful - priced right and therefore still a winner," Friedman says. He anticipates Gap's October same-store sales will rise 1% to 3% companywide.

Teen retailers that cater to more distinct niches continue their winning streak. Pacific Sunwear of California Inc. (NasdaqNM:PSUN - News) faces a daunting comparison with a year ago, when it posted a 19% same-store sales increase. Nonetheless, the chain's surf-and-skatewear should manage a 5% to 7% gain in October, Friedman says.

However, upscale Abercrombie & Fitch Co. (NYSE:ANF - News) and its lower-priced rival, American Eagle Outfitters Inc. (NasdaqNM:AEOS - News) , have had some difficulty of late selling their middle-of-the-road teen fashions. They're likely to post same-store sales declines of 5% and 8%, respectively, says Todd Slater, an analyst at Lazard Freres & Co. in New York.

"Despite an easy comparison, and efforts to improve its merchandise assortment, AEOS had a disappointing back-to-school," Slater wrote in a Tuesday research note. "And we saw no tangible signs of improvement through October."

Neither Deutsche Bank's Dreher nor Lazard's Slater own shares in any of the above-mentioned companies, but investors should assume that their firms are pursuing investment-banking business with all of the companies.

One or more members of Friedman's research team owns shares of Gap, and investors should assume that Merrill is pursuing investment-banking business with all of the above-mentioned companies.

-By James Covert, Dow Jones Newswires; 201-938-5360; james.covert@dowjones.com
biz.yahoo.com



To: Smiling Bob who wrote (6390)12/24/2003 10:56:22 AM
From: Smiling Bob  Respond to of 19256
 
Signs of an economy about to have the rug pulled out from under are starting to show. Housing mkt is spent. Builders vulnerable- will ck charts and numbers.
The post holiday numbers will deliver a jolt to the markets.
Wall Street analysts pumped up the market with miscued guidance. Just like the last last bubble.


Merrill Lynch said on Tuesday that analyst Dan Barry trimmed his earnings estimates for Kohl's Corp. (NYSE:KSS - News), J.C. Penney Co. Inc. (NYSE:JCP - News), Sears, Roebuck and Co. (NYSE:S - News) and Target Corp. (NYSE:TGT - News).

Barry was among the more bullish analysts at the start of the holiday shopping season, and his estimates on all four retailers had been above the average of Wall Street forecasts.

"The low-end consumer is spending much less than expected," Barry said in a research note.



To: Smiling Bob who wrote (6390)2/13/2004 1:16:52 PM
From: Smiling Bob  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 19256
 
The consumer not as confident or as flush with cash as current administration would like us to believe. Consumer doubts cause some sway in the economic house of cards.
Rug will get pulled out from market and economy this spring.
It's coming.
Message 19370937