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Good morningGood morning
Thinking them WA lobsters were supposed to go to China ...
New market in Aus needed.
Have a very nice day today.
Kind regards
rcw1
Good morning
Just heard a news report that Aussie Lobster trade with China is set to resume in March 2023. Good news for our Lobster Industry.
Kind regards
rcw1
The first loads of Australian coal to be shipped to China in more than two years have arrived in Guangdong province amid a flurry of positive signalling by Beijing about the trade outlook for the two “highly complementary” economies.
In a further good sign for Australian exporters caught up in China’s trade coercion campaign, Chinese authorities have begun to issue permits that would allow the resumption of Australia’s live lobster trade. Previous applications had been denied. The first lobsters could be flown to China within weeks.
Benjamin Herscovitch, an expert in the Australia-China relationship at the ANU, said Canberra was benefiting from Beijing’s wider re-engagement with the world and recognition that its economic coercion campaign on Australia hadn’t worked.
“I wouldn’t be surprised if by the middle of the year, we are at a point where the bulk of the Australian exports that have been restricted to the Chinese market are getting back in,” he told The Australian.
“Not necessarily in the same quantities … but still getting in.”
@macca , how do you feel about @sptrawler dissing you like that??She wouldnt be the first pollie, that promises the world and delivers maccas.
A few are lining up at the moment IMO.
Well Michael,
Hmm extra holdays = time not there. How's that going to work with critical staff shortages.G8 lifted pay rates almost 8 per cent in the year, amid a shortage of workers sector-wide.
The shortages are so acute that Gold Coast-based G8 has offered early childhood teachers an extra two weeks of holidays each year, to six weeks, among steps to retain staff.
price of local Australian wines has not gone up at all in the past few years.
a bag of Doritos or Smiths from the bottleshop now seems to be the same price
Fruit and veg... haha, grapes & spuds.Two of the main food groups covered
Fruit and veg... haha, grapes & spuds.
Using that theory, there's 3 more food groups in there though, salt, and fats. There's all 5... oh wait, forgot the best one, meat.
Nearly true here for wine in my categories but what used to be 15 is now 20 yet you can get it much lower on special so does that indicates higher margins or lower demand?Two of the main food groups covered.
I was at a local bottle shop last night looking for a bottle of white wine cheap enough for cooking but good enough to have a glass from. I'm absolutely convinced that the price of local Australian wines has not gone up at all in the past few years. $14 is what I spent on a West Aussie white, and it looked like the better-known local brands were also about the same price as they've always been.
The other thing I noticed was that a bag of Doritos or Smiths from the bottleshop now seems to be the same price (maybe less?) as my local IGA. For years the bottleshop was always a little bit more expensive for a bag of something than the grocery shop, but not anymore. Not sure this is the kind of hard evidence we need to prove Coles/Woolworths/Iga are engaged in collusion regarding pricing of food but it was certainly enough to make me think about it for a while.
Saw this:Nearly true here for wine .... so does that indicates higher margins or lower demand?
So, not too much pressure on input costs? At least for mass brands coming from the 'industrial ethanol' producers.The average wine-grape purchase price fell 10 per cent last year to about a four-year low of $630 a tonne, according to the 2022 National Vintage Survey by Wine Australia.
a lot of bottle-shops are owned ( franchised ) by EDV , COL or MTS ( actually my local is owned by IGA ) so maybe there is some cross-selling going on ( the IGA is only 30 metres away from the bottle-shop ) would not be hard to send some cartons of Doritos and Pringles to the bottle-shop as needed )The other thing I noticed was that a bag of Doritos or Smiths from the bottleshop now seems to be the same price (maybe less?) as my local IGA. For years the bottleshop was always a little bit more expensive for a bag of something than the grocery shop, but not anymore. Not sure this is the kind of hard evidence we need to prove Coles/Woolworths/Iga are engaged in collusion regarding pricing of food but it was certainly enough to make me think about it for a while.
A former neighbour of mine worked for one of the majors.I have seen a person going with a mni computer thingy doing a pricing check. Can't tell me that's not the opposition checking up.
not me , am forward buying stuff i am liable to use in the next 3 years ( or more ) teabags , rice , sugar , salt , lentils to put in rice or soups , etcTo the state of the economy, just an observation but most friends and associates seem to be spending big at the moment.
Not buying gold chains and a Rolls Royce sort of big but I mean people who've travelled interstate several times this year already and things like that. A theatre show this week, a concert three weeks later, whatever. Money doesn't seem to be something that's a concern. Either that or they're getting cheap air travel somehow.
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