As a result of the downturn it has been the more affluent shoppers who have been relied upon to maintain demand for homewares, but even then overall shopper numbers have declined. However, the economic and housing market recovery offers greater …
From our vantage point, it appears that aspirational guests have shifted some of their discretionary purchases away from dining, and into such items as cars, home remodeling projects or durable goods. While weekday trends which in many cases represent …
Our automobile insurance, mortgage loan rates, educational opportunities, job prospects and the products and services offered and the prices of these items will all be the result of big data analytics. The digitization of our world means computers will …
Toyota does not figure in many pickup fleets, but a number of small fleet owners choose the Tundra for their personal vehicle. Toyota says its research indicates Tundra buyers are younger, better educated and more affluent than what it refers to as …
The Pub COCK had been renovated before the Second World War, during which various parts of it had been preserved and later sold as 'collectors' items to the public. … Affluent neighbours around were not very much in favour of the idea of Sri Lanka …
… of the benefits investors projected. Managed by cost-conscious efficiency-minded out-of-towners, the increasingly generic stores gradually lost their appeal in the same way items in the fruit and produce section do when they're not tended as …
Under Ullman, Penney is bringing back frequent sales events that had been ditched and is restoring basic merchandise particularly store brands like St. John's Bay that were either phased out or eliminated by Johnson in a bid to attract more affluent …
The report was referring to a number of SROs issued by the Federal Board of Revenue (FBR) on the direction of Ishaq Dar to offer tax breaks to the affluent "who had threatened to stage a countrywide strike." This decision was not … The items removed …
Such discounting has become so widespread that many small, private colleges say they are stuck in a vicious cycle: They won't meet enrollment goals if they charge full price, even to affluent families, but they can't afford to continue cutting everyone …