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Wal-Mart's China inventory to hit US$18b this year

daveman

Golden Member
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Wal-Mart's China inventory to hit US$18b this year
By Jiang Jingjing (China Business Weekly)
Updated: 2004-11-29 15:21

The world's largest retailer, Wal-Mart Stores Inc, says its inventory of stock produced in China is expected to hit US$18 billion this year, keeping the annual growth rate of over 20 per cent consistent over two years.

The trend is expected to continue, company officials revealed.

"We expect our procurement stock from China to continue to grow at a similar rate in line with Wal-Mart's growth worldwide, if not faster," said Lee Scott, the president and CEO (chief executive officer) of Wal-Mart.

An unnamed company official also stated the firm will extend its procurement base from South China's Pearl River Delta to the North and East China in the coming few years.

A market rumour says the retailer has its eyes on a 340,000-square metre warehouse at a logistics garden of the Shanghai Waigaoqiao Bonded Area.

Scott covertly visited the site earlier this month, and hopes to own the whole warehouse to accommodate the firm's further expansion in China.

At present, Wal-Mart has quite limited warehouse resources in East China.

Xu Jun, Wal-Mart China's director of external affairs, ruled out the rumour, saying the CEO has never visited that or any other site for a warehouse.

Nevertheless, he said China is Wal-Mart's most important supplier in the world. The overseas procurement home office in Shenzhen, a city of South China's Guangdong Province, has played a key role in the firm's global purchasing business.

Wal-Mart shifted its overseas procurement centre from Hong Kong to Shenzhen in February 2002 to better serve the purchasing and exporting business.

"If Wal-Mart were an individual economy, it would rank as China's eighth-biggest trading partner, ahead of Russia, Australia and Canada," Xu said.

By the end of September, 2004, the top seven trading partners to the Chinese mainland are the European Union, the United States, Japan, Hong Kong, ASEAN (Association of Southeast Asian Nations), South Korea and China's Taiwan Province, state statistics from the Ministry of Commerce.

Last year, the firm bought US$15 billion products from China, half from direct purchasing, the other from the firm's suppliers in China.

More than 5,000 Chinese enterprises have established steady supply alliances with Wal-Mart.

Good quality and low price are the major attractions of the retailing giant.

Insiders point out Wal-Mart's imports from China have largely influenced the US trade deficit in China, which is expected to reach US$150 billion this year.

Xu declined to comment if the anti-dumpling measures of the US Department of Commerce have impacted the firm's procurement of textile commodities and household appliances in China, saying again that China is an important sourcing base for the firm.

So far, more than 70 per cent of the commodities sold in Wal-Mart are made in China.

Experts say Wal-Mart's plan of increasing its procurement from China has granted the firm a positive corporate reputation in the country.

"Buying more products in China means more job opportunities, which helps the firm win not only the government's hearts, but also the customers' appreciations," said Wang Yao, director of information department under the China General Chamber of Commerce.

In the United States, poor people find it possible to afford cheap "Made In China" products for their daily necessities, Wang said.

Wal-Mart, headquartered in Bentonville, Arkansas, entered China in 1996. It has opened 39 stores, including supercenters, "Sam's Clubs" and neighborhood markets in 15 cities around China, including Beijing, Harbin and Dalian.

It has recently announced the opening of its first store in Shanghai, slated for the middle of next year.

The firm has a total of 4,900 stores in 10 countries worldwide.
 
In the PBS documentry about a week or two ago, they said that 80% of walmarts inventory was chinese.

But... to be honest... If you buy a TV at best buy or CC or walmart/sams, or target, its going to be chinese or almost certainly foreign.

Walmart is projecting it will have 6000 walmarts and 700 sams clubs by the end of 2005. Although walmart missed its earnings projections for this quarter and the stock slipped yesterday, which could suck up some of the momentum.
 
Originally posted by: Train
Americans care more about saving a few bucks than other americans' jobs? noooo



its not just a few bucks. more like double or triple.

if we didn't buy from china, prices would be so high that those out of work employees who are working mcDs for $7 an hour now would have the same purchasing power with their higher paying manufacturing jobs then.

 
people are against outsourcing but if they managed to look at the in depth economics, they would realize it is the best solution.

 
Originally posted by: amoeba
Originally posted by: Train
Americans care more about saving a few bucks than other americans' jobs? noooo



its not just a few bucks. more like double or triple.

if we didn't buy from china, prices would be so high that those out of work employees who are working mcDs for $7 an hour now would have the same purchasing power with their higher paying manufacturing jobs then.
your missing an important part of the equation. The cheap stuff at walmart is not made with high paying manufacturing jobs, they are made by chinese guys who make less than the $7 an hour McD's worker.

 
Originally posted by: Train
Originally posted by: amoeba
Originally posted by: Train
Americans care more about saving a few bucks than other americans' jobs? noooo



its not just a few bucks. more like double or triple.

if we didn't buy from china, prices would be so high that those out of work employees who are working mcDs for $7 an hour now would have the same purchasing power with their higher paying manufacturing jobs then.
your missing an important part of the equation. The cheap stuff at walmart is not made with high paying manufacturing jobs, they are made by chinese guys who make less than the $7 an hour McD's worker.

What he's saying is, if walmart didn't outsource, the cheap stuff would inevitably increase in cost. So even if someone still had a job at walmart, their standard of living wouldn't necessarily increase than if walmart had the cheap stuff outsourced to china.
 
Originally posted by: Train
Originally posted by: amoeba
Originally posted by: Train
Americans care more about saving a few bucks than other americans' jobs? noooo



its not just a few bucks. more like double or triple.

if we didn't buy from china, prices would be so high that those out of work employees who are working mcDs for $7 an hour now would have the same purchasing power with their higher paying manufacturing jobs then.
your missing an important part of the equation. The cheap stuff at walmart is not made with high paying manufacturing jobs, they are made by chinese guys who make less than the $7 an hour McD's worker.



I'm not missing anything at all.

I understand how much a chinese worker makes. your average chinese manufacturing worker makes probably 3000 to 4000 USD a year.

Now, you have to understand that if all the manufacturing was done here, you will pay at least triple for these products.

so american manufacturing workers who "saved" their jobs, really haven't saved anything because they haven't increased their purchasing power.

 
The biggest advantage China has over the US in manufacturing is the cost of labor. Until the standard of living increases in China, they will keep that advantage. My boss says that our factory in Asia can pay ~100 people from the wages of one person here in the US.

Didn't Walmart have a "made in the USA" advertising campaign a few years back. Now, I see their commercials emphasis that a stock boy can end up managing a store.
 
dont forget to smash the mirror by the electronics section to destroy the heart of wal-mart...





i tired last week but i ended up buying 5 tires... buy 3 get two free.
 
Originally posted by: cthulhu
The biggest advantage China has over the US in manufacturing is the cost of labor. Until the standard of living increases in China, they will keep that advantage. My boss says that our factory in Asia can pay ~100 people from the wages of one person here in the US.

Didn't Walmart have a "made in the USA" advertising campaign a few years back. Now, I see their commercials emphasis that a stock boy can end up managing a store.



Yes, thats what it boils down to. Chinese workers are able to work the same amount as their american counterparts while surviving on much less material wealth.
 
Chinese workers are already demanding more pay and better hours. There was some info on NPR last week. Once they command better wages, the prices for these goods will rise. Walmart will then try to find a cheaper solution elsewhere, and then those workers will realize they're being underpaid, and the cycle will continue. Outsourcing just looks like a huge short-term, short-sighted, greedy way of doing business.
 
Originally posted by: Cat
Chinese workers are already demanding more pay and better hours. There was some info on NPR last week. Once they command better wages, the prices for these goods will rise. Walmart will then try to find a cheaper solution elsewhere, and then those workers will realize they're being underpaid, and the cycle will continue. Outsourcing just looks like a huge short-term, short-sighted, greedy way of doing business.

That may be true, but push too hard and those worker's will see the might of the communist government come crashing in on them.
 
I will shop somewhere else this year, cus Walmart is ghetto. It just feels low class to shop there. You feel like you are getting cheap junk for cheap. I don't know, but Ikea sells stuff cheap, but it has an upscale feel to it. It all comes down to respecting the customer, and price is only part of it. Target, Ikea, Trader Joes get it, I don't think Walmart does. The low class people shopping at Walmart are the same people feeling the squeeze from high gas prices, so that's why their sales are down. The irony of course is that gas prices are up due to rising demand from China, due to higher incomes in China, due in no small part to exports to supply Walmart.
I for one am happy there is a Walmart nearby. Diverts the crowds from the stores I like to frequent.
 
Hmmm...I still find that Target has cheaper clothes. $3 for a children's T-shirt, $4 for a women's turtleneck, $9.99 for a men's light jacket. incredible!
 
Dont forget that they dont pay for housing in china. The factory they work at provides their living quarters and pays recurring bills. Many of us in the US pay $15000 a year in housing costs alone.
 
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