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[color="Silver"](Because of)[/color] Even with "Mark" the [color="Silver"](rumored only the bastard) [/color]son of Mr. Costco in charge of Japanese operations, Costco Japan is making money but, "Costco in Japan is very stable, with middle to high market share." Costco can make THREE TIMES the money opening stores in Mexico and Brazil than Japan.Catoneinutica wrote: ....Why does Japan have so few Costcos? ...
Mike Oxlong wrote:I spoke with their senior North America membership director last month, and they are wanting/trying to get more openings. They are doing gangbuster business here.
Yokohammer wrote:And, you can be sure that local merchants and citizen's groups will be having intense heart-to-hearts with anyone thinking of selling or renting property to a company that could potentially wipe out entire swaths of the local economy.
omae mona wrote:That's certainly true, but does it apply to Costco? I just asked Mrs. Omae Mona, a certified Costco fanatic, if a neighborhood Costco would change her shopping habits. "You've gotta be joking. They sell completely different things than regular stores" was her response. 8 pound blocks of cheddar cheese are not very useful when making Omae Mona Jr.'s bento box for school each day.
On the other hand, I think local stores whose revenue depends on toilet paper sales would be in a bit of trouble if Costco showed up in the neighborhood.
Catoneinutica wrote:It's a mystery worthy of Erich Von Daniken: Why does Japan have so few Costcos? .
Screwed-down Hairdo wrote:Because no fucking spacemen came down and made the in the first place.
Catoneinutica wrote:Why does Japan have so few Costcos?
IkemenTommy wrote:Because no one wants to buy 50 gallon drum of mayonnaise when there is Cupie creamie squirts readily available.
Catoneinutica wrote:Costco's been wildly popular from the get-go. The Large Retailer law was long gone by the time they set up shop here. So why did they build one store in places like Osaka and Chiba, and then...stop. It's not like them. Sure, some Mom-and-Pop types would complain, but that hasn't stopped Jusco and the other Japanese behemoths, who've done a pretty good job of denuding most local shotengai.
Taro Toporific wrote:[color="Silver"](Because of)[/color] Even with "Mark" the [color="Silver"](rumored only the bastard) [/color]son of Mr. Costco in charge of Japanese operations, Costco Japan is making money but, "Costco in Japan is very stable, with middle to high market share." Costco can make THREE TIMES the money opening stores in Mexico and Brazil than Japan.
According to my Wallymart spies, Costco plans to increase number of stores in Japan in 3 years to 17 from the only nine stores now....[color="DimGray"]...If you want to full rest-of-the-story,
you will have to buy me the beers.[/color]
TennoChinko wrote:Michael Sinegal? I've only heard good things about him.
Anyways, one easy metric to look up is the market cap of Costco ($23.81 billion) versus Wal-Mart's market cap of $178.06 billion. Compared to Costco, Wal-Mart is the 800 lb gorilla in the room. Rather than wonder why Costco hasn't been opening more stores in Japan, I think the question is why Wal-Mart (via Seiyu or by themselves) have been only fractionally as aggressive as Costco until recently.
Another misunderstanding that might be had by visiting Costco stores is assuming that the busy (retail) traffic means they are thriving. Even though they serve a significant retail population, their main business is as a wholesaler, and one needs to see how many and how often the large trucks from regional grocery stores etc are lining up back to pick up goods.
TennoChinko wrote:Even though they serve a significant retail population, their main business is as a wholesaler, and one needs to see how many and how often the large trucks from regional grocery stores etc are lining up back to pick up goods.
Yokohammer wrote:This I don't understand.
If a consumer knows that he or she can get the same goods at the same price as a store or business that's buying from Costco, why buy from that store or business? Costco's role as a wholesaler eludes me.
omae mona wrote:Getting in and out takes a huge amount of time.
Fullback wrote:4. Metro stores (opening now in Japan from Europe) ...
omae mona wrote:1) Bulk doesn't work for everybody. In Japan in particular, customers may not have the storage available. And for perishable items, it can be hard to get through Costco size before the items reach expiration dates. Local stores can divvy these items up into more reasonable sizes. The 24-pack of jumbo size muffins are cheap, but how many families can eat them in the 2-3 days they are fresh?
omae mona wrote:2) Location, location, location. Costcos always are in awful locations and are surrounded by permanent traffic jams. Getting in and out takes a huge amount of time. Even if you want to buy 24 muffins, is it worth the extra hour versus popping into your local store?
Fullback wrote:1. Costco is not dependable for the restaurant business. They're out of stock on many items too many times and can't/won't give you a date for future stock. I don't have any experience with them in the US, but the operation here has no wholesale mentality at all. It seems strictly consumer oriented.
Taro Toporific wrote:The What Stores?
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