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Supply
Chain by the Numbers |
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- Jan. 15, 2015 -
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Never Again $100 Oil? Target Abandons Canada after Just Three Years - at Big Cost; Just One-Third of Needed Crane Operators at La-Long Beach; Here Come the Mexican Truckers - Maybe |
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$100
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The approximate price per barrel of oil that we saw for so many years - and which we are unlikely to ever see again. That from someone who ought to know - Saudi billionaire businessman and oil magnate Prince Alwaleed bin Talal, who said as much in a recent interview with the USA Today newspaper. bin Talal said the price collapse is simply a matter of supply and demand, with rising production in Iraq, Libya and of course the US combined with falling demand in both sluggish Western economies and China. Perhaps the most interesting question, bin Talal says, is at what price US fracking operations will no longer make economic sense.
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$5.4 Billion |
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That's the amazing write down Target stores will take in its Q4 after announcing it was closing all of its 133 stores in Canada, all opened since 2011. Target's Canadian operations have basically been a disaster since the strategy was launched, with more than $2 billion in operating losses over that time. There were a variety of factors involved in Target's Canadian fail, and supply chain was among them. The Canadian stores were plagued with empty shelves, which in turn were caused in part at the start from physical case counts tied to bar codes that did not match the information for those SKUs in the inventory system. (See Wrong Units of Measure on Cases Played Key Role in Disastrous Launch of Target Canada Last Year.) |
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