Wednesday, June 25, 2014

Fwd: Amazon is "Patient Zero" in a National Epidemic - Issue #755



---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Wall Street Daily <wallstreetdaily@wallstreetdaily.com>
Date: Wed, Jun 25, 2014 at 3:30 AM
Subject: Amazon is "Patient Zero" in a National Epidemic - Issue #755
To: IAMMEJTM@gmail.com


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In the retail business, effective inventory management is the difference between success and failure.

The greatest retail firms - from Wal-Mart (WMT) to Amazon (AMZN) - stay on top because they manage their inventories better than their competitors.

So when I discovered that Amazon has been reducing its inventory lead times - that is, the amount of time it takes for a vendor to get an item to Amazon's warehouse - I recognized that this was significant news.

Karl Denninger of The Market Ticker reports that Amazon "is getting extremely aggressive in this regard."

Yet the trend isn't just specific to Amazon.

The entire retail industry is seeing lead times shrink, some by over 50%.

Such dramatic cuts to lead times never happen without cause.

Regrettably, this evolving situation has implications far beyond your favorite online retailer.

As it turns out, Amazon is only an early symptom of what will soon become a nationwide epidemic. Read more »




Longtime readers already know the benefits of focusing on royalty plays instead of standard miners.

Last week, for instance, I brought Franco Nevada (FNV) to your attention. Just a few days later, shares catapulted to new 52-week highs.

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Lately, the news has been obsessed with two topics: Iraq and the Russia-Ukraine fiasco. In fact, we're even guilty of it, too.

But in the midst of this media barrage, another important story just about slipped through the cracks... even though it has implications just as powerful as the stories getting more air time.

You see, while ISIS has been conquering Iraq and Moscow has been bullying Kiev, China has been quietly expanding its influence in the South China Sea.

Specifically, the Chinese have been moving oil rigs into disputed territories and drilling for oil... all while ignoring the protests of the surrounding nations.

And considering that a minor skirmish in the Gulf of Tonkin launched the Vietnam War, could China's aggression possibly spark a new World War?

Neighboring countries such as Vietnam and the Philippines have cited a 2002 accord between the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) and China that created a nonbinding code of conduct, in order to "consolidate and develop the friendship and cooperation existing between their people and governments with the view to promoting a 21st century-oriented partnership of good neighbors and mutual trust."

But China's aggressive moves directly violate the spirit of that code, even if it was nonbinding. Read more »


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