地方愈大, 商場的價值就愈來愈小, 因為大眾轉向網上商店買野 !
香港商場是一家大小遊玩地方, 所以還有價值 ! 將來會否轉變就唔知啦 !
finance.yahoo.comBy Anupreeta Das
To Warren Buffett, it is the one area where he says his investing track record is "awful," "pretty bad" or "really bad."
Berkshire Hathaway Inc.'s tiny gaggle of retail businesses—from See's Candies to Ben Bridge Jeweler and Nebraska Furniture Mart—gets little attention from investors and analysts, and the companies are profitable.
But the retail sector continues
to confound the billionaire investor and his partner Charlie Munger.
They have bemoaned their bad luck in retail investing for years,
speaking about their retail "failures" at annual meetings and in
interviews. More recently, the duo—famously averse to technology
bets—have lamented how the Internet is rapidly reshaping shopping habits
and affecting Berkshire-owned retailers in ways they didn't expect.
At
Berkshire's annual meeting in May, Mr. Munger singled out the retail
business as one under threat. "I think the new technology is going to be
very disruptive...retailing in particular is facing major threats," he
said.
That's a lot of air
time for nine businesses that account for 2% of Berkshire's $182 billion
in annual revenue and shows how conscious Mr. Buffett is of the rare
blemish on his lauded investing record.
The
83-year-old, who built Berkshire, based in Omaha, Neb., into a behemoth
with $316 billion in market value, declined to comment.
Mr.
Buffett's difficulties in retail date to Berkshire's early years. In a
1989 investor letter, he called a 1966 deal to buy Baltimore department
store Hochschild Kohn one of the conglomerate's biggest mistakes to that
point.
Mr. Buffett has
said that retail is challenging because shopping habits and sales
channels are constantly changing, making it difficult for businesses to
build and maintain competitive advantages, or what he calls "economic
moats." Over the years, Mr. Buffett has bought a collection of small
retail companies that appeared to have at least some protection but,
thanks to the Internet, those moats are in danger of drying up.
Just as he savages his own record, Mr. Buffett is effusive about someone who he believes figured it out years ago: Amazon.com Inc.'s Jeff Bezos.
Last
year, when Mr. Bezos was negotiating to buy the Washington Post from
Graham Holdings Co., Mr. Buffett, a longtime adviser to the Post, told
Chief Executive Don Graham that Mr. Bezos was the "best CEO in America,"
according to comments Mr. Graham made at the time. More recently, Mr.
Buffett called Mr. Bezos "ungodly smart."
Consistent
with his hands-off ownership style, there is no indication Mr. Buffett
is pressing his managers to be more Amazon-like.
Still, several said they are taking steps to ward off online interlopers and pick up business outside traditional channels.
Brad
Kinstler, who heads See's Candies, said the company is unveiling a new
website in early 2015 and has stepped-up its social-media presence.
"We're
addressing how the customer wants to shop," whether it is ordering
online and picking up in a store or having it delivered, Mr. Kinstler
said. E-commerce is only about 5% of See's overall $400 million in sales
but is growing quickly, he said.
Ed Bridge, co-CEO of Ben Bridge Jeweler, said the mall-based retailer
is sharply increasing its digital marketing efforts to partly offset a
"drop-off" in foot traffic at malls serving middle- to low-income
shoppers.
In 2007, eight
Berkshire retailers accounted for $3.4 billion in sales and $274 million
in pretax profit. By 2012, revenue rose 8% to $3.7 billion and profit
rose 11% to $306 million. The retail group saw a meaningful jump in
revenue and earnings last year primarily due to the 2012 purchase of
Oriental Trading, an Omaha-based seller of discount party supplies,
Berkshire said.
Mr. Buffett
hasn't talked in detail about how the Internet is affecting his retail
companies, but in his 2013 annual letter, he said some companies in
Berkshire's manufacturing, service and retail group "have very poor
returns, a result of some serious mistakes I made in my job of capital
allocation. I was not misled; I simply was wrong in my evaluation of the
economic dynamics of the company or the industry in which it operated."
Even
Berkshire's record of stock investments in retailers is mixed: While
big bets in Wal-Mart Stores Inc. and Costco Wholesale Corp. have paid
off, Berkshire has cut its stake in U.K. supermarket chain Tesco PLC as
it struggles with market-share losses.
Berkshire's
four home-furnishings brands—Nebraska Furniture Mart, R.C. Willey, Star
Furniture and Jordan's—are a bright spot in its retail group. With two
stores and a third scheduled to open in Dallas next year, discount
retailer Nebraska Furniture Mart raked in about $900 million in sales
last year, a jump of 12.5% from 2012.
Despite
their success in local markets, "it's hard to see how Berkshire's
[furniture] brands don't feel pressure in five, 10 or 15 years" from
online rivals, said Matt McGinley, a retail analyst at ISI Group.
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