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Randy's avatar

“I did say items low in inventory would price through ahead of things that had been successfully overstocked ahead of the tariffs.” …unless they use the gas station pricing model.

When a gas station gets a refill delivery from the wholesaler and the price is higher than the last delivery, the retail price goes up immediately, even if the underground tank is half full before the delivery. The justification is that the per-gallon cost of the new delivery is the “replacement cost” of the gas they own at a lower price. But if the price of the next delivery is lower, they’ll hold the retail price high so as not to “lose money” on the gas sitting in the tank that they bought at the higher price.

The same will happen with hard goods in retail stores. They’ll reprice their existing inventory at “replacement cost” with tariffs included, even though no tariffs were paid on it. Then when Trump caves (yet again) and lowers or drops the tariff, the shelf price will not go down until the tariffed stock is gone.

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The Watchman's avatar

David, Good article once again which i will be linking today @https://nothingnewunderthesun2016.com/

Michael Snyder also had a slightly similar post about Walmart and Target upping their prices as well (http://theeconomiccollapseblog.com/walmart-and-target-are-really-jacking-up-their-prices/) which I'm linking also. However his articles are more general than yours', nor are they quite as detailed; which I always like about yours'. Also he didn't have the image of the Target employee switching prices. Speaking of images, thanks for linking my squirrel pic. Keep up the great work!

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