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“Unbelievably bad” November

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    #31
    Beighton noted that the disposable incomes of Asos’s twentysomething customers were still below the levels they were at a decade ago. “It’s more than just the Brexit-related factors,” he said.

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      #32
      Originally posted by original PM View Post
      Beighton noted that the disposable incomes of Asos’s twentysomething customers were still below the levels they were at a decade ago. “It’s more than just the Brexit-related factors,” he said.
      So some of it is the Brexit-related factor. And this is not bricks and mortars retail.

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        #33
        Originally posted by original PM View Post
        Right so Germany's consumer confidence is 10.6 in July 2018 and in Venezuela it was 67

        and in Italy it was 116.2
        Exactly! Do the maths!

        Comment


          #34
          Originally posted by original PM View Post
          Beighton noted that the disposable incomes of Asos’s twentysomething customers were still below the levels they were at a decade ago. “It’s more than just the Brexit-related factors,” he said.
          My other half's daughters continually buy from ASOS and then send 9 out of 10 item back (at ASOS expense).

          So basically a flawed online retailer.

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            #35
            Originally posted by DimPrawn View Post
            My other half's daughters continually buy from ASOS and then send 9 out of 10 item back (at ASOS expense).

            So basically a flawed online retailer.
            But somehow doing fine until very recently.

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              #36
              Originally posted by Old Greg View Post
              But somehow doing fine until very recently.
              Nothing to do with the end of cheap credit then (i.e. 10 years of money printing is coming to an end)...

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                #37
                Originally posted by DimPrawn View Post
                Nothing to do with the end of cheap credit then (i.e. 10 years of money printing is coming to an end)...
                See it you can work out the logical irrelevance of that question.

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                  #38
                  Originally posted by DimPrawn View Post
                  My other half's daughters continually buy from ASOS and then send 9 out of 10 item back (at ASOS expense).

                  So basically a flawed online retailer.

                  That's been going on for decades, since catalogues allowed return of goods. Women getting dresses to wear once then send back as they don't want to be seen wearing the same dress twice anyway.

                  The move to rental makes sense for items you only want to 'own' for a relatively short period of the product's lifespan so don't need to fork out the total purchase price, as seen with the boom in leased vehicles. Also removes the hassle of selling on and the gamble of price depreciation.

                  Looks like clothing retail is finally catching up:

                  Rental fashion: How luxury streetwear is changing the industry

                  Will we soon be renting rather than buying our clothes?

                  The old saying "if it appreciates own it, if it depreciates rent it" seems more apt than ever.
                  Maybe tomorrow, I'll want to settle down. Until tomorrow, I'll just keep moving on.

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