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Originally posted by SlowwHand
Now you're asking me to research. ![]() I don't know, MRT. I also don't know why if we can abandon the tax now, in the heaviest use period of the year, but it must be so high day-to-day. Like postal rates. WHY raise postal rates 3 cents every few months? Just make the damn things 50 cents and leave it. But I digress. when you tell me what inflation is, and how it affects the post office's ability to deliver mail as a dollar amount, then you will answer your own question. |
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Originally posted by Ogie Oglethorpe
You'll find oil companies are one of the MOST conservative industries for investment. Talk about slow and plodding in contrast to other industries. Very low risk takers. i meant the individuals who decry oil companies. why not get your voice in there with other shareholders and benefit when they benefit? |
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Most of the time - as long as the product demand is there, and there's an adequate ratio between the cost of capacity expansion and added sales. Refining oil to gasoline in the present market doesn't meet the latter criteria, but it's an extreme example, not a typical one.
One example right now is US manafacturers of large steam boilers. Capacity constraints are getting to the point where lead times are 24-30 months and climbing, and all that's doing is creating a market entry for Chinese companies (with no prior penetration of the US market) who will guarantee 14 months or less. I'm working on three different projects where US boilers would be preferred, even with higher costs, but their lead times have taken them out of the market. Four other project I'm going to be starting on within the next six months have the same problem. All told, around 100 million in sales that US manufacturers will lose, just on what I'm working on, and there's lots more where that comes from. Long term, they will permanently lose market share. |
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lotm - they pretty much are goofballs, or else totally ignorant of the relevant markets, to assume collusion (illegal) between companies, when individual self interest arrives at the same result without breaking any laws or leaving trails of evidence.
![]() Some people want to see conspiracies, because there's an enemy to strike at. Much less appetizing than admitting that it's simple market reality, and the level of pain isn't so hight that consumers will react in adequate numbers to affect supply and demand. Of course, if the loonies were really clever, they'd want a non-profit coop or public sector refinery to tilt the market in favor of consumers, but that would take brains and some depth of understanding of the subject matter, so activists pretty much can go home at that point. |
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