Anonymous wrote:Sit her down and ask her questions.
Where was she 3 years ago on this and she is basically in charge right now? Any problems we have like inflation, crime, illegal immigration are on her.
Let’s see her positions on defund the police, deporting criminal illegals…..
Anonymous wrote:Sit her down and ask her questions.
Where was she 3 years ago on this and she is basically in charge right now? Any problems we have like inflation, crime, illegal immigration are on her.
Let’s see her positions on defund the police, deporting criminal illegals…..
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:JBS , meat processing, enjoyed a 70% increase in profits. Ranchers lost money.
Throttling supply to increase decrease demand and rake in insane profit increases on staple food products isn’t capitalism. Ranchers don’t have a wide choice of processing companies.
JBS USA Holdings, Inc. is a meat processing company and a wholly owned subsidiary of the Brazilian multinational JBS S.A. The subsidiary was created when JBS entered the U.S. market in 2007 with its purchase of Swift & Company.
JBS USA is based in Greeley, Colorado. Its competitors include Hormel Foods, Cargill, Smithfield Foods, and Tyson Foods.
SÃO PAULO — JBS SA reported net income loss for fiscal year 2023 ended Dec. 31, 2023, totaling $132 million. For the fiscal fourth quarter of 2023, JBS had net income of $7 million, which was 96.3% below the year-over-year mark.
“Despite the persistent negative effects of the cattle cycle in the United States, the operational management measures adopted last year and the improvement in the medium-term outlook enable us to enter 2024 on the path of margin recovery,” said Gilberto Tomazoni, chief executive officer of JBS SA, in the earnings report. “Our focus on operational excellence was key to correcting the course of two of our businesses that underperformed in 2023: USA Beef and Seara. We identified issues and took action to adopt management measures based on our culture, with a focus on people and discipline in execution.”
https://api.mziq.com/mzfilemanager/v2/d/043a77e1-0127-4502-bc5b-21427b991b22/ffed7156-c0f3-aa92-efa3-010754c4ae05?origin=1
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https://mycleanbeef.com/m.index.php
Started by farmers against what you posted. They raised something like $300 million and built their own plant.
https://100percentfedup.com/u-s-ranchers-banding-together-to-save-our-food-supply-300-million-raised/
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:JBS , meat processing, enjoyed a 70% increase in profits. Ranchers lost money.
Throttling supply to increase decrease demand and rake in insane profit increases on staple food products isn’t capitalism. Ranchers don’t have a wide choice of processing companies.
Citation?
DP. Probably this.
https://www.politifact.com/factchecks/2022/jun/30/abigail-spanberger/big-four-meat-packers-are-seeing-record-profits-sp/
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:JBS , meat processing, enjoyed a 70% increase in profits. Ranchers lost money.
Throttling supply to increase decrease demand and rake in insane profit increases on staple food products isn’t capitalism. Ranchers don’t have a wide choice of processing companies.
JBS USA Holdings, Inc. is a meat processing company and a wholly owned subsidiary of the Brazilian multinational JBS S.A. The subsidiary was created when JBS entered the U.S. market in 2007 with its purchase of Swift & Company.
JBS USA is based in Greeley, Colorado. Its competitors include Hormel Foods, Cargill, Smithfield Foods, and Tyson Foods.
SÃO PAULO — JBS SA reported net income loss for fiscal year 2023 ended Dec. 31, 2023, totaling $132 million. For the fiscal fourth quarter of 2023, JBS had net income of $7 million, which was 96.3% below the year-over-year mark.
“Despite the persistent negative effects of the cattle cycle in the United States, the operational management measures adopted last year and the improvement in the medium-term outlook enable us to enter 2024 on the path of margin recovery,” said Gilberto Tomazoni, chief executive officer of JBS SA, in the earnings report. “Our focus on operational excellence was key to correcting the course of two of our businesses that underperformed in 2023: USA Beef and Seara. We identified issues and took action to adopt management measures based on our culture, with a focus on people and discipline in execution.”
https://api.mziq.com/mzfilemanager/v2/d/043a77e1-0127-4502-bc5b-21427b991b22/ffed7156-c0f3-aa92-efa3-010754c4ae05?origin=1
![]()
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:JBS , meat processing, enjoyed a 70% increase in profits. Ranchers lost money.
Throttling supply to increase decrease demand and rake in insane profit increases on staple food products isn’t capitalism. Ranchers don’t have a wide choice of processing companies.
Citation?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s actually forward thinking to look at price gouging and price fixing now. Sticky prices has always been a thing in economics. For example, orange crops fail in Florida due to a weather event. Prices spike because of a shortage in supply. People blame the storm not the grocery store or farmer. Next year, crops are fine but prices do not reduce? Why? People got used to paying the higher prices. Farmers try to produce more oranges because they are profitable. Too many oranges so farmers drop prices to get grocery chains/distributors to buy their oranges. Distributors grab the lower prices but do not drop their prices. They pocket the profits. It is easier and more reliable for companies to make a higher profit margin on lower volume than lower profit on higher volume. As long as the competition doesn’t cut their prices to the consumer this model keeps working for them.
Supply/demand dynamics are broken because companies are not competing they are colluding.
Company collusion on prices already is a crime. There is no need for further legislation.
Anonymous wrote:JBS , meat processing, enjoyed a 70% increase in profits. Ranchers lost money.
Throttling supply to increase decrease demand and rake in insane profit increases on staple food products isn’t capitalism. Ranchers don’t have a wide choice of processing companies.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:In 2023, profit margins in the grocery industry hit 1.6% — the lowest level since it was 1% in 2019 — as total expenses increased, FMI found.
https://www.grocerydive.com/news/grocery-industry-profit-margins-fall-to-pre-pandemic-levels-fmi/720517/#:~:text=Societal%20challenges%20like%20lack%20of,total%20expenses%20increased%2C%20FMI%20found.
Let’s get that profit margin down to zero! We don’t need greedy store owners making any profit. Groceries are a necessity.
And yet in gross dollars, they are at all time highs.
Anonymous wrote:It’s actually forward thinking to look at price gouging and price fixing now. Sticky prices has always been a thing in economics. For example, orange crops fail in Florida due to a weather event. Prices spike because of a shortage in supply. People blame the storm not the grocery store or farmer. Next year, crops are fine but prices do not reduce? Why? People got used to paying the higher prices. Farmers try to produce more oranges because they are profitable. Too many oranges so farmers drop prices to get grocery chains/distributors to buy their oranges. Distributors grab the lower prices but do not drop their prices. They pocket the profits. It is easier and more reliable for companies to make a higher profit margin on lower volume than lower profit on higher volume. As long as the competition doesn’t cut their prices to the consumer this model keeps working for them.
Supply/demand dynamics are broken because companies are not competing they are colluding.
Anonymous wrote:JBS , meat processing, enjoyed a 70% increase in profits. Ranchers lost money.
Throttling supply to increase decrease demand and rake in insane profit increases on staple food products isn’t capitalism. Ranchers don’t have a wide choice of processing companies.
Anonymous wrote:JBS , meat processing, enjoyed a 70% increase in profits. Ranchers lost money.
Throttling supply to increase decrease demand and rake in insane profit increases on staple food products isn’t capitalism. Ranchers don’t have a wide choice of processing companies.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s actually forward thinking to look at price gouging and price fixing now. Sticky prices has always been a thing in economics. For example, orange crops fail in Florida due to a weather event. Prices spike because of a shortage in supply. People blame the storm not the grocery store or farmer. Next year, crops are fine but prices do not reduce? Why? People got used to paying the higher prices. Farmers try to produce more oranges because they are profitable. Too many oranges so farmers drop prices to get grocery chains/distributors to buy their oranges. Distributors grab the lower prices but do not drop their prices. They pocket the profits. It is easier and more reliable for companies to make a higher profit margin on lower volume than lower profit on higher volume. As long as the competition doesn’t cut their prices to the consumer this model keeps working for them.
Supply/demand dynamics are broken because companies are not competing they are colluding.
This is what has been happening post COVID. It’s why many companies have been experiencing record profits. It’s unfettered capitalism at work.
well then consumers adjust and substitute - also capitalism. I stopped using door dash and eating out because it’s too expensive. I cook at home but opt for Amazon Fresh and TJ because they are cheaper. eventually the market will adjust to this too.
Collusion at the processing and distribution layer is not capitalism, it’s price fixing.