How about Swedish?Tiwaz wrote: Which countries healthcare system you would rather trust your life with?
UK or Finnish?



How about Swedish?Tiwaz wrote: Which countries healthcare system you would rather trust your life with?
UK or Finnish?
Tiwaz wrote:Lidl & Specsavers is just about big chain from abroad trying to grab marketshare so they even might sell at loss
Tiwaz wrote:Thus, Lidl pays for everything it buys little less, enabling them to move some of them mass purchased junk to Finland for cheaper and still make some profit.
You're on the right lines with the buying power thing, however after a certain point, bulk-buying power has a diminishing benefit. Buy one brick for a euro, buy a thousand bricks and it's 50 cents a brick. Buy 100,000 bricks, and it's still 49,999999999223 cents per brick. Buying for a market of 2.5 million mouths should be enough to achieve the bulk of discounts available on main product lines. Niche products are of course a different story (as that brainless tart in Hank's youtube video clearly demonstrated).Tiwaz wrote: Lidl can order crap fow WHOLE @#$% CHAIN TO GET LOWER PRICES.
K&S-chains, even when buying for whole chain, can never get that high bulks.
There is really no confusion. Are you aware for example that many stores sell coffee at loss?Karhunkoski wrote:Tiwaz wrote:Lidl & Specsavers is just about big chain from abroad trying to grab marketshare so they even might sell at lossTiwaz wrote:Thus, Lidl pays for everything it buys little less, enabling them to move some of them mass purchased junk to Finland for cheaper and still make some profit.![]()
But your confusion does remind me to make these points:
You forget that there are also issues of storage. Lidl can take advantage of cheaper storage space in other countries along with it's bulk purchases.- Distribution is a relatively small part of product cost. As an example for any products imported to Finland: You can move 20 tonnes of frozen product (I took the most expensive example), from one end of Europe to the other for a couple of thousand euros. That's about 5 cents on a bag of oven chips. If you move tins or some other ambient temperature product, then the cost is half that.
Except you cannot purchase same crap for 2,5 million mouths. One likes his bread from one brand, another one from different. Thus, your purchases volume goes down as variety increases.
You're on the right lines with the buying power thing, however after a certain point, bulk-buying power has a diminishing benefit. Buy one brick for a euro, buy a thousand bricks and it's 50 cents a brick. Buy 100,000 bricks, and it's still 49,999999999223 cents per brick. Buying for a market of 2.5 million mouths should be enough to achieve the bulk of discounts available on main product lines. Niche products are of course a different story (as that brainless tart in Hank's youtube video clearly demonstrated).
Yes I do, in fact I know more about retail pricing strategies than most.Tiwaz wrote:There is really no confusion. Are you aware for example that many stores sell coffee at loss?
I omitted to talk about storage because it's relatively negligible in a FMCG business environment. The whole idea is that you don't hold much stock of anything.Tiwaz wrote: You forget that there are also issues of storage. Lidl can take advantage of cheaper storage space in other countries along with it's bulk purchases.
Of course everyone eats differently and this same appetite for different tastes is equally applicable everywhere. Nobody said this wasn't the case.Tiwaz wrote:
Except you cannot purchase same crap for 2,5 million mouths. One likes his bread from one brand, another one from different. Thus, your purchases volume goes down as variety increases.
Really? In my example you would have to buy over 1 billion bricks to achieve a "bulk buy" discount of 1 cent? I admire your optimistic approach to Lutheran thriftiness, but lets bring some realism in here?Tiwaz wrote: And volumes which Lidl can purchase tend to give it benefit. That 0,0000000xxx777 cents starts to count when you speak of chain which deals in sufficiently large quantities.
It is surprising how much money fractions of cents make in volumes.
Tiwaz wrote:Either way, fact remains that taking UK or other totally different society with demographics and geography which is completely different, or market chain like Lidl which by itself runs bigger amount of business all over Europe than all Finnish domestic chains combined is flat out stupid.
As Lidl is Ky, they don't have to, publicly, declare anything. On the other hand, I wouldn't like to be the person in Lidl ky that is personally liable for the debts...Karhunkoski wrote:As to whether Lidl declares a profit is something different, and depends how aggresively it reinvests in its operations. Maybe Lidl invests heavily, runs a good chunk of debt, and avoids oodles of tax.![]()
Personally I prefer that the kids work at sweatshop instead of sexshop. And by sexshop I mean a shop selling sex, not toys.penelope wrote:Personally I have fewer qualms about shopping in Lidl (which actually does sell some Finnish produce) than I do about purchasing clothes from H&M or Indiska where I have an eerie feeling that I might be buying something made by a 7-year old in a sweatshop in India or China.
I believe that person is called "Lidl Holding Oy"Upphew wrote:On the other hand, I wouldn't like to be the person in Lidl ky that is personally liable for the debts...