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> That's not Walmart's only problem. Walmart has been known for questionable > purchasing practices. Let's say you make product X and you're the only one > who makes that product. You sell around 100,000 units per month for $10 > each throughout the US from a few small retail locations, to which you sell > it to those retail stores for around $7 each. Walmart finds out about it > and comes to you and says that it will commit to 1,000,000 units/month but > it wants to but it for $6 each. This goes on for a few months, which makes > you happy because you've been able to grow you production and hire more > people. Now Walmart comes back to you and says since it's selling so many > it will commit to 2,000,000/month but it wants it for $5/month. You say > yes because you don't want to lose your existing orders and at $5 you can > still make a bit of profit. But after this, this is when Walmart starts to > demand that you only sell through them and continues pushing your price > down further and further to the point some manufacturers have had to go out > of business. All because American's want to save a few cents and Walmart > wants to get more customers and earn a few more cents. "Monopsony" -- a single buyer (as monopoloy is a single seller) An executive at Colgate told me that they are down to 15 customers and the future is bleak. --dan
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