MORE EXCUSES, SPIN, PROPAGANDA & LIES

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Posted on 22nd December 2012 by Administrator in Economy |Politics |Social Issues

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Below are two MSM stories that have been put out in the last three days. Remember the massive MSM public relations campaign about the FANTASTIC Black Thursday/Friday sales. The projections for retail sales were parabolic. The optimism from the “neutral” National Retail Federation was bubbly. This was surely going to be the best holiday shopping season in years. The MSM dutifully transmitted all of the propaganda designed to excite the ignorant masses into a buying frenzy. But a funny thing happened on the way to retail riches – the middle class ran out of money.

This Christmas retail season is turning out to be a disaster. Not only aren’t sales rising by the 4% to 5% predicted by the corporate media and the mouthpieces on Wall Street and at the NRF, they have fallen in December versus last year. Considering that real inflation is running over 5%, a sales decline of 1% is a real decline of 6%. These are the type of results you’d expect during a recession. Of course, in six months, when the government and MSM finally acknowledge that a recession began in July of 2012, this will all make sense.

If real, honest, non-captured journalists existed in the MSM, they would have questioned the false storyline from the beginning. Why would a rational person expect retail sales to be strong when:

  • Americans will have paid the highest average price for a gallon of gasoline in history in 2012.
  • Real wages have fallen for 22 consecutive months.
  • More people left the workforce (2.4 million) than got full-time jobs in the last year.
  • An additional 1.4 million people were added to the food stamp rolls, bringing the total to 47.7 million (20% of all households in the U.S.)
  • The number of people getting extended unemployment benefits has declined by 1.4 million (luckily most just signed up for SSDI).
  • With a savings rate of 3.6%, the disposable income has about run out.
  • There are 10,000 Boomers turning 65 per day and realizing they haven’t saved shit for their retirement. This realization tends to reduce spending.

The MSM has no rational critical thinking journalists. They have corporate mouthpieces spewing the company line and attempting to convince the sheep that a recovery is underway and it is their duty to spend. The intelligencia actually believe that increased consumer spending using credit is self sustaining and desirable. They believe it is beneficial to their own agenda of enriching bankers, mega-corps, and the politicians in DC. They don’t care that debt financed spending has ruined the middle class.

The results of three major consumer oriented companies this week were downplayed. Bed Bath & Beyond, Darden and Walgreens all reported terrible results:

  • Bed Bath and Beyond has been one of the best run retailers in the country for years. They always had comp store sales of 5% to 10%. This past quarter their comp store sales were 1.7%, less than inflation. Traffic was negative. Their profit was flat. Their inventory grew 50% greater than sales. If housing is truly recovering, why wouldn’t their sales be growing?
  • Same store sales at Darden (Olive Garden, Red Lobster, Longhorn Steakhouse) were down 2.7% and traffic was plunging by 4% to 8% in the last two months. These are the restaurants of the middle class and their results reflect a consumer collapse.
  • Walgreens profits plunged by 25% with a 4.8% decrease in traffic and prescription sales down by 7%. They have overexpanded and have hit the wall. The Walgreens near my house has been open for two years. It has a parking lot with 50 spaces. I’ve never seen more than 5 cars in the lot. It will be closed within the next two years.

These are three of the biggest retail/restaurant chains in the country. They are sucking wind. The false storyline of economic recovery is revealed by these results. These companies have the benefit of massive advertising budgets and economies of scale. If they are struggling, this means the mom and pop retailers and restaurants are closing up on a mass scale. You may have noticed the Space Available signs dotting the landscape.

Now we are being provided with the bogus excuses to cover-up the fact we are in recession. The poor sales are now being blamed on Sandy, the fiscal cliff, and the Connecticut shooting. This is nothing but a load of bullshit. Sandy occurred a week before Thanksgiving. The Keynesians assured us that the pent up demand and sales related to rebuilding would actually increase sales after the storm. Now it is an excuse for poor national sales, even though it only impacted portions of a few states in the Northeast. This is pure crap.

Next we have the fiscal cliff crapola. At least 80% of the morons in this country don’t even know how to spell fiscal cliff, let alone understand enough about it to keep them from buying an iPad. More people watched the grand finale of Jersey Shore than care about the fiscal cliff. Only the talking heads and government weasels are consumed by this fake crisis. Not one person in this country has changed their Christmas purchase plans due to the fiscal cliff.

Lastly, the MSM is blathering about the clueless consumers being deterred from hitting the mall because some kids were slaughtered by a madman. Yeah, the nation paused for about 10 hours on Friday to mourn for the children. Do you honestly think the malls were less crowded on Saturday due to the mourning? If so, you don’t realize how shallow Americans are. There was probably a surge in Call of Duty PS3 game sales.

Now for the good news. The bargains in January are going to be epic. The going out of business sales in March will be even better. And then next November the MSM will tell you we’re going to have great holiday sales. And so it goes. 

Retailers may see disappointing holiday sales

ShopperTrak cites school shooting, Sandy and fiscal cliff as it cuts holiday forecast

By Andria Cheng, MarketWatch

NEW YORK (MarketWatch) — A leading tracker of shopper traffic on Wednesday cut its seasonal sales forecast, saying the holiday selling period would have “a different tone” in the aftermath of the school shootings in Connecticut, superstorm Sandy and as talks drag on over avoiding the fiscal cliff.

“It’s a change in mind-set,” said Bill Martin, founder of ShopperTrak, which follows shopper traffic in malls. “Gifts may not be as important as spending time with family. This holiday season is just not going to be as robust.”

ShopperTrak cut its holiday season forecast to a 2.5% increase in November and December, down from its original projection of a 3.3% gain in September, Martin said in an interview.

ShopperTrak’s numbers show sales and foot traffic in the week ended Dec. 15 were down 4.3% and 4.4% respectively, while ShopperTrak had expected both measures would increase with less than two weeks to go before Christmas. Traffic and sales also were down in the week ended Dec. 8.

Despite strong Thanksgiving week sales, including the crucial Black Friday, retailers’ November sales have already turned out disappointing as they weren’t able to make up for lost demand from superstorm Sandy. Retailers’ November miss raises holiday stake.

Friday’s school shootings in Connecticut, superstorm Sandy and fiscal cliff discussions “have put a damper on the holiday season,” Martin told MarketWatch. “We would have expected sales and traffic to go up (by now), but we’ve not hit that.”

National Retail Federation said on Wednesday it isn’t revising its holiday outlook at this time. It had projected holiday sales to rise 4.1% to $586.1 billion.

Because of the disappointing sales, retailers may now begin to change their plans and start to promote more heavily to lure traffic the next few days, Martin said.

“It’s going to be at the expense of deep discounts,” he said.

It remains to be seen how the discounts and promotions will shape up.

So far, retailers including Target Corp. (NYSE:TGT) , Sears Holdings Corp. (NASDAQ:SHLD) , Best Buy Co. (NYSE:BBY) , Macy’s Inc. (NYSE:M) and Toys “R” Us have planned extended hours or different last minute sales heading to Christmas to draw shoppers. Stores won’t rest till you’ve bought your gifts.

However, many of those promotions so far look to be part of their normal plan as the industry has controlled inventory better to reduce profit-eroding discounts, analysts have said.

Procrastinating shoppers also may deliver another wildcard to retailers. Industry giant Wal-Mart Stores Inc. (NYSE:WMT) said its customer survey showed 68% of shoppers haven’t completed their shopping. One of its last-minute strategies is to ensure it’s well stocked on popular holiday gifts including Wii U console and iPad mini as each of its stores has received truckloads of those new products the past week, the company said.

 

Retailers turn to discounts to boost holiday sales

Shoppers wary of spending as fiscal cliff looms

By Steve Gelsi, MarketWatch

NEW YORK (MarketWatch) — U.S. retailers looked to revive flagging holiday sales on the last shopping weekend before Christmas.

With the fiscal cliff and other economic jitters dampening prospects for the sector, shopping centers, malls and storefront establishments geared up Saturday for the heaviest sales weekend of the year ahead of Tuesday’s gift-giving.

The peak of the holiday shopping season came as concerns mount over a downward move in the economy if lawmakers don’t agree on a package of tax hikes and spending cuts to avert the so-called fiscal cliff. See Friday’s story about stalled fiscal cliff efforts.

Expectations remained less than rosy since shoppers have already been putting the brakes on spending. Ree: Retailers may see disappointing holiday sales

“I don’t think we’re going to get a great pickup in the last few days here,” retail analyst Ronald Friedman of Marcum LLP told Reuters.

Sales growth for the week ended Dec. 15 is running about 4% behind last year’s pace, according to ShopperTrak data released Friday.

U.S. retail sales fell 1.2% below 2011’s level in the first half of December, causing a downward shift in expectations.

In one hopeful sign, retail sales jumped 16.4% over the previous week.

“Shoppers took advantage of the mild weather in most parts of the country to shop for gifts and other seasonal merchandise,” ShopperTrack said.

Retailers are expected to turn to deep discounts to lure Americans into more spending as the holiday shopping season comes to a climax.

But recent setbacks in Washington won’t provide much of a lift for flagging consumer sentiment.

The drama took a turn for the worst on Friday, with no resolution reached ahead of the holiday break and only a few days of negotiations left before automatic spending cuts and tax increases take effect on Jan. 1.

President Barack Obama asked lawmakers to accept a scaled-back deal to extend unemployment insurance and tax cuts for those making $250,000 or less. He then headed off for his annual Christmas trip to Hawaii.

On the Republican side, House Speaker John Boehner earlier this week canceled the so-called “Plan B” tax vote linked to fiscal-cliff talks. See related story.

The failure to reach a resolution on the fiscal cliff has apparently impacted consumer confidence, according to data released Friday. See related story on consumer confidence.

“What could have been a merry Christmas is going to turn to a ho-hum Christmas, and we can thank our, you know, politicians for getting in the middle of it all,” NPD analyst Marshal Cohen said in comments to Reuters in an article published on Saturday.

BLACK FRIDAY BULLSHIT

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Posted on 28th November 2011 by Administrator in Economy |Politics |Social Issues

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The Confidence Game continues. The MSM is doing their part to pump up the volume. They must get the stock market to rise. The 1% want to have a happy holiday. So rather than think or analyze, they spout the gibberish being put out by the National Retail Federation about the record setting sales over Black Friday Weekend. I call Bullshit.

They said that the number of people shopping over the weekend rose 6.6%. AWESOME!!! But wait. The biggest retailers opened their doors about 6 hours earlier than last year on average. So, the stores were open about 12% longer this year versus last year, and visitors only went up 6.6%. Doesn’t sound quite as awesome now. Too bad MSM morons can’t think or choose not to think.

Next we hear that the average shopper spent $398.62 this year versus $365.34 last year. Such exact numbers when retailers don’t report their sales on a daily basis. Amazing!!! This is a 9.1% increase over last year. If you don’t have your head in the sand, you know from John Williams’ Shadowstats site that inflation is running in excess of 10% if measured the way it was in 1980. So, a 9.1% increase in spending is not even keeping up with inflation.

We have 20 to 30 million people unemployed, those with jobs are getting 2% to 3% raises, inflation is running at 10%, the savings rate has dropped to 3.5%, we’re headed into recession, consumer credit has not been rising, and the MSM and government is trying to convince you that the consumer is spending their ass off. Right!!!!

The only records set this year were for homeless and number of people at food shelters on Thanksgiving. But, don’t worry. The stock market will soar today on this false storyline and the 56th time that Europe has been saved in the last two months.

Thanksgiving Sales Set Record as Shoppers With Jobs Chase Bargains: Retail

U.S. consumers poured into the malls and took to the Web during Thanksgiving weekend, spending a record $52.4 billion at a pace that may be hard to sustain as the holiday shopping season gets under way.

Retail sales climbed 16 percent, and shoppers spent $398.62 on average, up from $365.34 a year earlier, the National Retail Federation said yesterday, citing a survey from BIGresearch. Web sales on Black Friday surged 26 percent to $816 million and 18 percent to $479 million on Thanksgiving Day, said ComScore, a Reston, Virginia-based research firm.

Shoppers took advantage of deals and earlier opening hours at retailers from Gap Inc. (GPS) to Wal-Mart Stores Inc. (WMT) to Toys “R” Us Inc. Apparel and electronic sales were particularly strong, said the Washington-based NRF. With the monthly U.S. unemployment rate averaging 9 percent this year, the results suggest consumers with jobs remain willing to spend.

“It’s a good, encouraging sign the consumer is out there despite all the distractions,” said Marshal Cohen, an analyst at NPD Group, a Port Washington, New York-based research firm. “We’ll have an OK holiday,” he said, adding a caveat that the strength of the Thanksgiving holiday may simply have pulled sales forward from December.

Consumer spending, which accounts for about 70 percent of the economy, grew at a 2.3 percent annual rate in the third quarter, the fastest pace of 2011, the Commerce Department said Nov. 22. The nation’s savings rate fell, suggesting some consumers used their nest eggs to keep spending.

Added Jobs

The U.S. unemployment rate likely held steady in November, matching the 9 percent average for all 2011, according to the median estimate of 55 economists in a Bloomberg News survey. The economy may have added 120,000 jobs this month, according to the average of 59 estimates. While that’s more than the 80,000 added in October, it’s less than this year’s 125,600 monthly average.

Today analysts will have another opportunity to assess consumers’ resilience when online merchants dangle deals in what has become known as Cyber Monday. On Dec. 1, retailers report same-store sales, a key indicator for retail growth because new and closed locations are excluded.

Black Friday arrived with consumer sentiment at levels previously reached during recessions, as a record share of households said this is a bad time to spend, according to the Bloomberg Consumer Comfort Index. The measure has reached minus 50 or less in nine of the past 10 weeks, an unprecedented performance in its 26-year history.

Polling Gap

Brisk Black Friday sales may illustrate a gap between what consumers tell pollsters and how they actually behave — a trend that has prevailed for much of this year, according to Ken Perkins, president of Retail Metrics, a Swampscott, Massachusetts-based research firm.

Industrywide monthly same-store sales have gained for more than two years and missed analysts’ projections once this year, according to Retail Metrics.

“A solid Black Friday suggests the rest of the season should be pretty good,” Perkins said. “Those who have jobs have been willing to spend.”

The NRF didn’t raise its estimate for holiday spending: a 2.8 percent increase in sales, or about half of last year’s 5.2 percent gain.

While some shoppers said they planned to cut back this holiday season, others said they would spend more because their financial prospects have improved.

One was Pam Jones, a 51-year-old mother of two from Columbus, Ohio, who got a job at a medical billing office this year and said she planned to spend $1,200 this holiday season, or about twice as much as usual.

Jeans and T-Shirts

Jones was shopping on Nov. 26 for clothes for her 13-year- old son at an Abercrombie & Fitch Co. (ANF) store in Dublin, Ohio. The New Albany, Ohio-based teen-oriented chain was offering 40 percent off the entire store. Jones purchased jeans and t-shirts emblazoned with the Abercrombie & Fitch logo.

“My son is getting into name-brand fashions now so we want to get those for him,” Jones said. “The stuff is expensive, though, so I came out for the sales.”

Kristen Gartland said she’s nearly doubling her Christmas shopping budget to $350 this year. On Black Friday the 20-year- old waitress filled a cart with oven mitts, stockings and toys for her seven younger siblings at a Target Corp. (TGT) store in Huber Heights, Ohio.

Gartland said she’s positive about her finances because she’s making decent money working at a sports bar.

‘Good Job’

“It’s a good job to have,” she said.

Shoppers such as Stacey Carfi planned to buy for themselves. The 32-year-old controller visiting Washington from Charleston, South Carolina, paid full price for two pairs of pants — one for herself — at Lululemon Athletica Inc. (LULU), the Vancouver-based purveyor of yoga gear. She planned to buy herself shoes this holiday, too.

“It is the season for buying, so why not get in on that?” Carfi said.

A record 226 million people went shopping during the Thanksgiving weekend, compared with 212 million last year, the NRF said.

“There seems to be a bit of an exhale happening” with U.S. consumers, Ellen Davis, NRF vice president, said on a conference call yesterday. “They feel like it’s OK to spend a little bit more.”

People shopped in fewer destinations and they spent more money — indicating they weren’t only buying merchandise advertised in circulars, she said. Department stores were a favorite destination, as they have been all year.

‘Social Experience’

Macy’s Inc. (M) Chief Executive Officer Terry Lundgren said he was struck by how many people in their 20s descended on the Cincinnati-based chain’s flagship store in Manhattan on Black Friday.

“It was almost a continuation of whatever social experience they were having hours before,” he said.

Strong online sales demonstrated that consumers are increasingly comfortable shopping on the Web, said Jennifer Davis, an analyst at Lazard Capital Markets in New York.

“We can definitely expect Cyber Monday sales to be stronger than ever,” she said.