Dana Baker wrote:Mr. Crnolatas,
point number one:
We just purchased a car-based SUV.
Dana
I take it back some of the new car based SUVs do have some pretty good numbers, but still!!!
.
Moderator: Jim O'Bryan
Dana Baker wrote:Mr. Crnolatas,
point number one:
We just purchased a car-based SUV.
Jim O'Bryan wrote:
So then Walmart and the US has nothing to worry about?! As soon as these cards come in, it will shoot up like a roacket! First I am not sure of this, second where do the profits kand while we wait?
Joseph Milan wrote:Jim O'Bryan wrote:
So then Walmart and the US has nothing to worry about?! As soon as these cards come in, it will shoot up like a rocket! First I am not sure of this, second where do the profits land while we wait?
I'm not sure why you're focused on Walmart here. While it is true that Walmart's sales numbers did not meet expectations, their sales were still up from a year ago at this time by 3 to 4 percent. Focusing on Walmart not meeting their expectations is like saying that a reduction in an expected rate of growth in the government sector is actually a cut.
Other retailers did much better than WalMart, which should make all the WalMart haters happy.
Joe
Jim O'Bryan wrote:
Who? Online sales up everything else down or flat. Walmart disappointed.
Jim O'Bryan wrote: Crocker Park and Legacy Village. A place to go and walk and window shop. Look at their numbers.
In my simple mind, Grow Lakewood nearly nailed it. Offices not retail. Offices bring in people, people who shop at lunch, and some stay and live here. You show me someone that moves next to a mall, and I will show you someone with a shopping and a credit problem. But they missed, for obvious reason, something else that brings people to cities, and these people stay and spend money there. BIG ASS apartments/condos. Then let them order online, because they will fill the supermarkets, restaurants and entertainment in and around the city.
Joan Roberts wrote:Mr. O.
I have to challenge a couple of your assertions. The fiirst is that Crocker Park and Legacy Village are somehow failures. You say "look at their numbers" but I wonder what you mean. Virtually every store's individual sales figures are proprietary and very closely-guarded, so unless you have someone inside breaking corporate policy by feeding you numbers, I don't know how factual that is. Judging from my recent visits to places like Trader Joe's, CP is indeed off to a good start. Everyone I saw at CP today was carrying a bag.
Joan Roberts wrote:Second is the comment about "BIG ASS apartments/condos" What's above all those shops at CP? uhoh. "BA" apartments/condos. And what's across the street? The kind of offices the Grow Lakewood report wanted instead of stores.
If your theory about oil is right, you WILL be able to live, shop, and work without a car. But you'll be able to do it at Crocker Park, not in Lakewood.
Joan Roberts wrote:Now I know there is no prayer for a CP in Lakewood, nor would we necessarily want to do something like that anyway. However Lakewood is not an island, wha other cities and towns do, does have an impact on what we have here, and we do have to respond and compete.
Jim O'Bryan wrote:But what is even better we are but 7 minutes away(for me) and we have non of the traffic, non of the problems, none of the crime, and a city that is relatively quiet with a great future.