пятница, 11 сентября 2015 г.

uWalmart Asks More Suppliers To Pay For Space In Warehouses And On Shelves, And They Rebelr


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  • Walmart, the world’s biggest retailer, has an unimaginable amount of power over the vendors who supply it with products. Some suppliers are speaking out, though, after the mega-retailer has asked 10,000 more suppliers to pay storage fees for keeping products in its distribution centers, in warehouses, and on store shelves.

    Massive vendors like Procter & Gamble and Unilever are in a stronger negotiating position with Walmart, because the chain can’t just stop selling Tide or Ben & Jerry’s. It’s smaller companies that are being squeezed the most, since their cash flow is smaller, and Walmart is encouraging them to borrow money to cover the new fee structure, and to wait 90 days after delivering merchandise for payment instead of 30.

    Bloomberg Businessweek discussed the situation with a representative of one smallish business, which didn’t want to be named or even have its industry printed for obvious reasons, who said that the company would need to cut employee benefits or even lay off staff to make up the difference and cover the fees that Walmart is asking for.

    Walmart says that isn’t the case: some suppliers were already paying these fees, and others “This is the price of not just selling things to Wal-Mart, but leveraging Wal-Mart’s massive platform,” a spokesperson for Wally World told Bloomberg.

    The fees would punish companies whose products aren’t flying out of the store by having them pay the company for the shelf and warehouse space that they take up, which Walmart says is a simple cost-saving measure. Suppliers speculate that it’s to help cover recent starting pay increases for new workers while hurting their margins more than Walmart’s.

    Wal-Mart’s Suppliers Are Finally Fighting Back [Bloomberg News]



ribbi
  • by Laura Northrup
  • via Consumerist


uStarbucks To Roll Out Mobile Ordering Nationwide, Accept Android Pay By End Of Monthr


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  • (ronnyg)

    (ronnyg)

    Android users – and those living in areas of the country where mobile ordering isn’t available at their local Starbucks – can soon order and pay for their morning cup of coffee straight from the comfort of their phones with little human contact, as the coffee chain announced today that it would expedite the rollout of its mobile ordering feature to all U.S. stores by the end of the month.

    The Seattle Times reports that Starbucks is speeding up implementation of an Android version of its mobile ordering and paying app, and planning to expand the service to all stores as soon as the end of September.

    The company previously anticipated the feature would be ready by the end of the year.

    “We have a winner, and it’s running ahead of our expectations,” Starbucks Chief Financial Officer Scott Maw told analysts and investors at an investment conference in New York on Thursday.

    The mobile ordering and pay feature, which until now had only been available to iOS users, was first released last year to select users in the Pacific Northwest and expanded to 3,400 more stores in 21 states in June.

    The mobile-ordering app has recently been tweaked to allow customers to access a customized menu tied to specific stores, the Seattle Times reports.

    When Starbucks first began testing the service it said users could select coffee or food while in line or before coming into the cafe, a move that officials say could speed up service and save you precious time.

    The program will count down when your beverage is due to the minute.

    There’s still no word on exactly what proper etiquette for using the service will be: can you simply jump the line if something is wrong with your pre-ordered beverage?

    Starbucks to roll out mobile ordering and pay for Android in September [The Seattle Times]



ribbi
  • by Ashlee Kieler
  • via Consumerist


uFor-Profit Colleges Lead The Way On Loan Defaults: Reportr


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  • During the Great Recession, the growing industry of for-profit colleges promised millions of Americans a path to a higher education. But the high tuitions charged by many schools sent U.S. student loan debt soaring to more than $1.2 trillion. A new report claims that while for-profit schools charged top-dollar, many students were getting a cut-rate education, making it difficult to obtain jobs that will allow them to pay down this debt.

    The report [PDF] from the Brookings Institute analyzed Department of Education data on student loans and earnings to look for any correlation between a student’s education and loan default rates. The authors found that the current student loan debt crisis is largely concentrated among nontraditional borrowers who attended for-profit schools and other non-selective institutions.

    Prior to the recession, for-profit colleges and non-selective education institutions accounted for just a fraction of the student loan debt in the U.S., the report states.

    The report’s authors, Adam Looney of the U.S. Treasury Department and Stanford University’s Constantine Yannelis, found that the biggest changes for student loans began around the time the recession hit, when many consumers lost their jobs and returned to college in search of better opportunities.

    Many of these nontraditional students were drawn to for-profit colleges that touted flexible schedules and high job placement rates.

    When the researchers compared the schools that received the most student loan funding in 2000 versus the largest loan recipients of 2014, the growth of for-profit schools is clearly evident.

    In 2000, only one for-profit school — the University of Phoenix — made the list, and its $2.1 billion in loan funding was the second-largest amount of all schools. Fourteen years later, more than half of the list — and eight of the ten top spots — were for-profit schools. By this time, Univ. of Phoenix’s loan reliance had shot up to $35.5 billion; its 2000 figure of $2.1 billion would not have even made the top 25 in 2014.

    Screen Shot 2015-09-11 at 10.00.28 AM

    According to the report, by 2011 – some three years after the recession began – borrowers at for-profit and two-year institutions represented almost half of student-loan borrowers leaving school and starting to repay loans.

    These students went on to account for 70% of student loan defaults just three years later, the report found.

    “[These students] borrowed substantial amounts to attend institutions with low completion rates and, after enrollment, experienced poor labor market outcomes that made their debt burdens difficult to sustain” the report states.

    For example, the report found the median borrowers from a for-profit institution who left school in 2011 and found a job in 2013 earned about $20,900. However, one-in-five (or 21%) of these students were not employed.

    Likewise, community college borrowers on the same timeline earned $23,900, while almost one-in-six (or 17%) were not employed.

    Unfortunately, these students borrowed heavily to pay relatively high tuition costs. Median loan balances for these borrowers jumped almost 40% – from $7,500 to $10,500 – for for-profit students and about 35% – from $7,100 to $9,600 – for those at two-year colleges.

    These more expensive loan debts, coupled with the relatively high percentage of students who remained unemployed after attending for-profits or community colleges has created a student loan debt crisis centered around the proprietary educational industry, the authors found.

    In all, the report shows more than 25% of students attending nontraditional universities who left school during or soon after the recession would default on their loans within three years.

    “In other words, what type of institution students attend matters: default rates have remained low for borrowers at most 4-year public and private non-profit institutions, despite the severe recession and relatively high loan balances,” the report states. “These students’ generally high earnings, low unemployment rates, and greater family resources appear to have enabled them to avoid loan repayment problems even during tough economic times.”

    In fact, the report found that of the students who started repayment on loans in 2011, just 2% of graduate students and 8% of traditional undergraduates defaulted within two years.

    Still, the authors say the increase in students seeking education during the recession and ultimately settling on for-profit institutions is just one part of the story, the other is the schools themselves.

    For-profit college students represent a relatively small fraction of consumers seeking higher education – just 11% – but they represent about 44% of all federal student loan defaults.

    The authors say these rates lead them to believe it’s ultimately the quality of education at these schools that drive students to default, as they aren’t prepared to find employment that would allow them to pay their loans.



ribbi
  • by Ashlee Kieler
  • via Consumerist


uJane Birkin Gives Hermès Permission To Continue Using Her Name On Crocodile Leather Bagsr


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  • Actress Jane Birkin and Hermès have come to terms over the pricy crocodile leather handbags that have borne her name since the 1980s: she’d voiced concerns over the treatment of the crocodiles used to provide the leather and demanded the company stop using her name to sell them, but it appears that talks between the two sides have worked in Hermès’ favor.

    Birkin is satisfied with how the company ensures the crocodiles reared for their skins are treated humanely, the company said today in a statement, adding that it had identified an “isolated irregularity” in the slaughter process at a crocodile farm in Texas.

    Hermès says it’s warned the farm it would cut ties if it continues to neglect its recommended procedures, and will now require suppliers to sign an agreement to uphold the highest standards in crocodile treatment.

    “Hermès reasserts its commitment to implement best practice in the farming of crocodiles,” Hermès said. “This is in strictest compliance with international regulations.”

    In July, the actress told Hermès to rename the bags until better practices replace the “cruel” methods used at some slaughtering facilities, after People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals said some workers at one farm were told to cut into 500 conscious alligators with knives when the bolt gun didn’t work, among other alleged mistreatment.



ribbi
  • by Mary Beth Quirk
  • via Consumerist


uDiscount Supermarket Chain Aldi Prepping To Take On Walmart & Others In U.S.r


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  • When you mention the name of Germany-based supermarket chain Aldi to most Americans, you get one of three responses: “I love Aldi; it’s so cheap!”; “Aldi? No thanks, I prefer higher-end supermarkets”; “Aldi? Oh yeah, I remember that ‘Rock Me Amadeus’ song. Oh wait… that’s Falco.” The company, which already has some 1,400 stores stateside, is planning a large-scale expansion in the coming years that it hopes will win over those last two categories of consumers with low prices and make it a dominant player in the U.S.

    There have been signs of Aldi’s American plan for months, with the company opening 2015 by snapping up Mid-Atlantic discount operator Bottom Dollar. More recently, the chain announced an expansion into Southern California, bringing its national presence up to 32 states.

    The Wall Street Journal reports that Aldi has plans to invest $3 billion and add 600 new stores to its U.S. roster by 2018. That would bring the total to around 2,000, putting it in the same league as Target and not far from supermarket biggies like Safeway, Kroger, and SuperValu.

    At the same time, another German discount grocery giant, Lidl, is looking to enter the U.S. market in the coming years. These two companies recently shook up the UK supermarket landscape by drawing in consumers in search of affordable food. In just three years, Aldi and Lidl went from having a combined 6% share of the UK grocery business to nearly 10%. Even its competitors think that will continue to grow significantly over the next decade.

    As a result of this competition, shoppers in the UK have seen price drops at more established supermarket chains like Sainsbury, Asda, and Morrison. There’s no guarantee that the expansion of Aldi and Lidl into more U.S. markets will have as far-reaching an effect, but the industry is watching.

    “They’re on everybody’s radar in the U.S. today,” one analyst tells the Journal. “Everybody knows how successful they are in Europe.”

    Beyond its namesake supermarkets, Aldi already has a brand that may be familiar to stateside consumers. The Trader Joe’s chain of stores has been operated by the company’s Aldi Nord group for more than three decades. But the company’s Aldi Sud group is responsible for its U.S. and UK Aldi-branded supermarket operations.



ribbi
  • by Chris Morran
  • via Consumerist


uSalmonella Outbreak In Minnesota Linked To At Least 17 Chipotle Restaurantsr


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  • A salmonella outbreak in Minnesota that’s sickened 45 people and sent five to the hospital has been linked to at least 17 Chipotle restaurants, say investigators with the state’s Department of Health. Officials believe that the contaminated ingredient has already been removed from all Chipotle restaurants in Minnesota.

    The outbreak’s source hasn’t been confirmed yet, but investigators said that interviews with 34 of the people who fell ill found that 32 of them had eaten at a Chipotle in St. Paul, Minneapolis, St. Cloud and Rochester, reports the Minneapolis Star Tribune. Those people ate Chipotle food between Aug. 19 and Aug. 26, and got sick between Aug. 20 and Aug. 29.

    “It’s safe to eat at Chipotle,” said Health Department spokesman Doug Schultz, who apparently ate food from Chipotle this week, ostensibly to show that it’s safe.

    If you feel sick 12 to 72 hours after eating at a Chipotle — with symptoms like stomach pains, diarrhea or fever — you should report the symptoms to a health care provider but you don’t necessarily need medical attention, said an epidemiologist for the Health Department’s foodborne diseases unit. But if you’re elderly, have chronic diseases or weakened immune systems, it’s important to report those symptoms.

    Though 45 cases have been reported, it’s likely that the outbreak is larger than that, the Health Department says. However, officials note that the Chipotle outbreak is not related to another salmonella outbreak linked to cucumbers recently, as they’re different strains of the bacteria.

    “There is no reason to believe that this product is available anywhere in Minnesota any more,” the Department’s epidemiologist said.

    Minnesota Salmonella outbreak linked to Chipotle [Minneapolis Star Tribune]



ribbi
  • by Mary Beth Quirk
  • via Consumerist


uAfter Twenty Years, Target To Drop Cherokee Brand Clothesr


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  • The racks of clothing available at Target will look a bit different in two years, as the retailer announced this week that it won’t renew a decades-long contract with apparel retailer Cherokee.

    The Wall Street Journal reports that Target decided not to renew the current deal, which is set to expire on January 31, 2017, in order to make way for newer clothing labels, specifically in children’s apparel.

    Cherokee is primarily found in the children’s department, but also sells brands like Liz Lange and Tony Hawk.

    For now, the company says it will continue to sell Liz Lange brand maternity clothing at Target.

    Products from the company accounted for an estimated $1.1 billion in retail sales for Target last year.

    The WSJ reports that the move by Target not to renew the long-running contract is just another piece of the retailer’s transformation under new CEO Brian Cornell, who has put an emphasis on style and fashion at the big box store by creating limited time collaborations with big name designers.

    Other efforts have included a comprehensive review of the brands the chain is carrying and changes to appeal to Target’s new core customer that is younger and more diverse.

    “As Target prioritizes signature categories, including kids and baby, we are looking at our business in new ways,“ Stacia Andersen, Target’s senior vice president of apparel and accessories, tells the WSJ.” We look forward to building on an already strong foundation, and are excited to introduce several new brands in the future.”

    Target Won’t Renew U.S. License for Cherokee Brand [The Wall Street Journal]



ribbi
  • by Ashlee Kieler
  • via Consumerist