fredag 25 november 2016

The business of reselling returned shop items

Retailers hope to sell more than $650bn of goods this season, roughly the annual economic output of Switzerland. Ideally, companies’ supply of products would precisely match demand for them. In reality millions of items will stay on shelves or get sent back after purchase—in all of 2015 Americans returned goods worth $261bn, out of a total $3.3trn sold. What happens next?
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Dealing with unwanted goods can amount to a tenth of the cost of making and distributing them in the first place. But for a whole string of logistics firms, discount chains, brokers, dollar stores and more, they are a big earner.
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 Last year, for example, FedEx spent $1.4bn to buy GENCO, a specialist in so-called “reverse logistics”. The world’s top clothing retailer is now TJX, which snaps up surplus inventory and shifts it at a discount.
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Last year KKR, a well-known private-equity firm, invested in a company called Channel Control Merchants, which calls itself an “extreme-value” retailer and exporter of excess inventories.
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Many goods will end up going into landfill.
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Inmar, which offers an array of reverse-logistics services, is often asked to cut labels from apparel, so someone can’t try to return items to a store. Such anonymisation also leaves a brand untarnished, as its clothes are then flogged on a global bazaar for unwanted items that is known as the secondary market.
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This market is vast and complex. Sales for the American part alone reached just over $486bn in 2014, according to research by Dale Rogers of Arizona State University and Zachary Rogers of Colorado State University. 
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More e-commerce means more returns, as customers buy goods without seeing them, often in several sizes, then send back what they don’t need.
http://www.economist.com/news/business/21710855-what-happens-all-goods-shoppers-dont-want-business-reselling-returned-shop-items

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