11.29.2016

Well, the early returns suggest that the increasingly digital cast of Black Friday (and the entire Thanksgiving holiday) has not curtailed buying on Cyber Monday. According to the Washington Post (owned by Amazon founder Jeff Bezos):
...e-commerce sales for the day were on track to soar 9.4 percent over last year. As of Monday morning, some $540 million had already been spent online, according to Adobe, whose software runs under many retailers' websites. And while Cyber Monday has long reigned supreme as the biggest day of the year for digital shopping, it faced a stiff challenge from Black Friday this time around. Retailers were on track to pull down $3.36 billion online on Monday, which would just barely edge out the $3.34 billion spent Friday.
Cyber Monday originated in the tendency of consumers to use their office computer networks to purchase whatever they could not find on Black Friday.  The shopping tradition has continued despite the rise of mobile and at-home network access... encouraged by extensive marketing and discounting. According to Adobe Digital Insights, "Mobile continues to drive the majority of visits to retail websites on Cyber Monday at 53 percent (44 percent coming from smartphones, 9 percent from tablets), while accounting for 35 percent of sales (25 percent smartphones, 10 percent tablets)."

According to Reuters: "Amazon.com Inc (AMZN.O) said it is on pace to have its "best Cyber Monday in history," and said orders placed on its mobile app are higher than last year. Wal-Mart Stores Inc (WMT.N) said purchases made on the Wal-Mart app jumped 150 percent this year." Some have speculated that Amazon generates roughly one-third of annual sales in connection with Cyber Monday.

MORE DETAIL FROM ADOBE DIGITAL INSIGHTS

11.28.2016

Early results from Black Friday seem to confirm recent softening in US consumer confidence.

According to the National Retail Federation:
More than 154 million consumers will shop over Thanksgiving weekend, up from 151 million shoppers in 2015, according to the annual Thanksgiving weekend results survey released today by the National Retail Federation and Prosper Insights & Analytics.  Average spending per person over Thanksgiving weekend totaled $289.19, down slightly from $299.60 last year. With an average of $214.13 specifically going toward gifts or 74 percent of total purchases.
Retail spending continued to show a steady -- sometimes startling -- shift to online purchases. According to Adobe Digital Insights:
More than $5 billion ($5.27 billion) was spent online by the end of Black Friday, a 17.7 percent increase year-over-year (YoY). Black Friday set a new record by surpassing the three-billion-dollar mark for the first time at $3.34 billion (21.6 percent growth YoY) while Thanksgiving accounted for the remaining $1.93 billion. Black Friday became the first day in retail history to drive over one billion dollars in mobile revenue at $1.2 billion, a 33 percent growth YoY. 
Especially given the growth in mobile revenue, it will be interesting to see if we see a flattening of so-call Cyber-Monday spending.

11.25.2016

Distributed ledger technology -- often referred to as blockchain -- is emerging as an important (potentially revolutionary) aspect of managing supply and demand networks.

Bloomberg reports:
With the blockchain, Wal-Mart will be able to obtain crucial data from a single receipt, including suppliers, details on how and where food was grown and who inspected it. The database extends information from the pallet to the individual package.“It gives them an ability to have an accounting from origin to completion,” said Marshal Cohen, an analyst at researcher NPD Group Inc. “If there’s an issue with an outbreak of E. coli, this gives them an ability to immediately find where it came from. That’s the difference between days and minutes.”
As blogged previously (10.24.2016), food safety is a big driver, but once implemented distributed ledger technology can advance plenty of other purposes.  TechCrunch has a nice short piece outlining the potential.

11.06.2016

Source: Morgan Stanley, January 2016

Grocery is the crucible of supply and demand.  It is huge. Demand is diverse. Products are constantly proliferating.  Price-sensitivity is intense.  Many high-value products are innately perishable.  Competition is fierce.

The enterprise that can crack-the-code on grocery will also have the systems and discipline to compete in most other retail categories.  A dozen years ago when grocery distributor Fleming fell to Walmart (plus its own self-created problems), it signaled that Sears had finally lost the wider retail war.

Sears and Kmart, A&P and many more long-time players were locked into long-term leases in declining markets.  Most were still operating on circa 1980 supply chains. Walmart could pick and choose its new locations. Walmart pioneered the information and distribution tools that transformed distribution from push to pull.

Today the competitive center-of-gravity is online. While only about five percent or so of the current market, online is growing fast.  Morgan Stanley estimates that Americans will spend about $42 billion for online groceries this years, a 163 percent increase over 2015.

Supermarket News reports:
Amazon currently dominates online grocery in the U.S., but that's due in part to the relative slowness with which brick-and-mortar retailers have moved online.... That is changing this year as the two largest physical sellers of groceries in the U.S. — Wal-Mart Stores and Kroger, respectively — aggressively add "click-and-collect" capabilities allowing their customers to shop online and retrieve orders at local stores. Walmart through the second quarter was offering pickup in 60 markets and 400 locations; Kroger's ClickList offering had about the same number of locations through its second quarter.
Walmart is also partnering with Uber, Lyft, and other non-traditional players to test last-mile urban delivery.

According to a recent Harris poll, online grocery purchasing tracks with greater density:

  • Millennials (36% vs. 31% of average Americans); 
  • College grads (35% vs. 26% high school education or less); 
  • Parents (37% vs. 28% of those without kids); and, 
  • Those in an urban setting (38% vs. 30% suburban & 25% rural). 

These indicators happen to also track with greater affluence.

At the end of the last century Walmart transformed the grocery market in the United States by claiming twenty percent -- and more -- of baby-boomer parents in the suburbs and exurbs.  Now the fight is over a new generation in a new environment.

And while Walmart, Kroger, and others are stepping up their online offerings, Amazon is testing and targeting product variations specifically designed for affluent, time-constrained, quality-conscious urban consumers. According to several media reports including Bloomberg and the Washington Post:
AmazonFresh, is beginning home-delivery of “nitro” coffee, whoopie pies, Nepalese dumplings and other foodie fodder sourced from local micro-kitchens, food trucks and farmers markets to customers across a broad swath of the East Coast. The move allows mom-and-pop artisans to tap into AmazonFresh’s huge reach, placing their goods on doorsteps in hundreds of Zip codes up and down the mid-Atlantic within 24 hours of the order being placed. It means the tiny businesses — many of whom have sales of less than $25,000 a year — will be able to sell beyond the traditional farmers markets and brick-and-mortar storefronts.
This is partly going where your target consumers are at and it's partly about pushing your competitors into an expensive arms race. But it is also about setting up the greatest challenge conceivable and setting out to conquer it.  If you can make a profit on home-delivery of the latest foodie fad, you have the capacity to effectively supply any demand just about anywhere.

11.01.2016

There's been another disruption of the Colonial Pipeline.  Depending on the damage -- unclear at this point -- this could be harder-hitting and longer-lasting than what was experienced in September. (See 9/26 post below.)

According to the Associated Press:
For the second time in two months, a pipeline that supplies gasoline to millions of people was shut down, raising the specter of another round of gas shortages and price increases. 
The disruption occurred when a track hoe — a machine used to remove dirt — struck the pipeline, ignited gasoline and caused an explosion Monday that sent flames and thick black smoke soaring over a forest in northern Alabama, Colonial Pipeline said. One worker was killed and five were injured. 
A September leak that spilled 252,000 to 336,000 gallons of gasoline occurred not far from the location of Monday's explosion. That leak led to days of dry pumps and higher gas prices in Alabama, Georgia, Tennessee and the Carolinas while repairs were made.
The cause of the leak still has not been determined, and the effects of the latest disruption weren't immediately clear. 
Colonial Pipeline, based in Alpharetta, Georgia, operates 5,599 miles of pipelines, transporting more than 100 million gallons daily of gasoline, jet fuel, home heating oil and other hazardous liquids in 13 states and the District of Columbia, according to company filings. Authorities have not said which type of fuel was involved in the explosion Monday. 
Plagued by a severe drought after weeks without rain, the section of the state where the explosion happened has been scarred by multiple wildfires in recent weeks, and crews worked to keep the blaze from spreading.
Reuters reports US gasoline futures are up eleven percent in anticipation of much tighter supplies between Atlanta and Baltimore.

Shortly before noon (CDT) on Tuesday, Colonial Pipeline reported, "Line 1, Colonial’s gasoline line, remains shut down. At this time, we anticipate Line 1 remaining down for the remainder of this week. Line 2, which transports diesel, jet fuel and other distillates, was restarted at approximately 11:00 PM CDT on October 31."

Friday, November 4 UPDATE:

The company says: "Based upon the latest information we have available, we now project a Sunday afternoon restart of Line 1."

Typically in cases like this, such projections are not made public without nearly 100 percent confidence.  If so, supplies of gasoline should remain sufficient for metro Atlanta, Charlotte, and most other locations.  There are some indications that the outcome of the September disruption may have diminished the public's tendency to hoarding behavior which is often the greatest threat to continuity of supplies.

Sunday, November 6 UPDATE:  As projected, Line 1 has been restarted.