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#1
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![]() "Shortwave Sportfishing" wrote in message ... http://tinyurl.com/rc4vf "Our second quarter results are in line with our expectations," said Brunswick Chairman and Chief Executive Officer Dustan E. McCoy. "Throughout the key second quarter selling season for 2006-model-year marine products, however, we have experienced significant declines in retail demand, which has resulted in an increase in pipeline inventories. As we now enter the off- season, we can't rely solely on retail demand to rebalance the pipeline. So, we will be reducing further our production levels, leading to a lowering of our earnings estimate for the second half of the year. This is primarily due to reduced sales and the impact of fixed cost absorption from production cuts needed to adjust pipeline inventories. Although this will result in reduced margins, we believe that managing pipeline inventories is critical in a cyclical, as well as a seasonal, industry." Translation: "Oh oh - things ain't lookin' so good." :) Here's my take: Marine manufacturers took advantage of a strong economy and cheap money over the past 3 or 4 years, and increased their prices on new boats an awful lot. But now gas prices and higher interest rates have made enough people think twice about a new boat purchase, and folks just aren't jumping at 30' twin outboard boats that cost $200,000+ anymore. The other factor hurting them is that people don't have a bunch of untapped equity in their homes anymore, so they can't make a boat payment "disappear" in their home mortgage by simply refinancing. |
#2
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"NOYB" wrote in message
ink.net... "Shortwave Sportfishing" wrote in message ... http://tinyurl.com/rc4vf "Our second quarter results are in line with our expectations," said Brunswick Chairman and Chief Executive Officer Dustan E. McCoy. "Throughout the key second quarter selling season for 2006-model-year marine products, however, we have experienced significant declines in retail demand, which has resulted in an increase in pipeline inventories. As we now enter the off- season, we can't rely solely on retail demand to rebalance the pipeline. So, we will be reducing further our production levels, leading to a lowering of our earnings estimate for the second half of the year. This is primarily due to reduced sales and the impact of fixed cost absorption from production cuts needed to adjust pipeline inventories. Although this will result in reduced margins, we believe that managing pipeline inventories is critical in a cyclical, as well as a seasonal, industry." Translation: "Oh oh - things ain't lookin' so good." :) Here's my take: Marine manufacturers took advantage of a strong economy and cheap money over the past 3 or 4 years, and increased their prices on new boats an awful lot. But now gas prices and higher interest rates have made enough people think twice about a new boat purchase, and folks just aren't jumping at 30' twin outboard boats that cost $200,000+ anymore. The other factor hurting them is that people don't have a bunch of untapped equity in their homes anymore, so they can't make a boat payment "disappear" in their home mortgage by simply refinancing. Sounds like the boat mfr's decision makers graduated from the same mail-order college as the monkeys who run GM, Ford & Chrysler. |
#3
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![]() NOYB wrote: "Shortwave Sportfishing" wrote in message ... http://tinyurl.com/rc4vf "Our second quarter results are in line with our expectations," said Brunswick Chairman and Chief Executive Officer Dustan E. McCoy. "Throughout the key second quarter selling season for 2006-model-year marine products, however, we have experienced significant declines in retail demand, which has resulted in an increase in pipeline inventories. As we now enter the off- season, we can't rely solely on retail demand to rebalance the pipeline. So, we will be reducing further our production levels, leading to a lowering of our earnings estimate for the second half of the year. This is primarily due to reduced sales and the impact of fixed cost absorption from production cuts needed to adjust pipeline inventories. Although this will result in reduced margins, we believe that managing pipeline inventories is critical in a cyclical, as well as a seasonal, industry." Translation: "Oh oh - things ain't lookin' so good." :) Here's my take: Marine manufacturers took advantage of a strong economy and cheap money over the past 3 or 4 years, and increased their prices on new boats an awful lot. But now gas prices and higher interest rates have made enough people think twice about a new boat purchase, and folks just aren't jumping at 30' twin outboard boats that cost $200,000+ anymore. The other factor hurting them is that people don't have a bunch of untapped equity in their homes anymore, so they can't make a boat payment "disappear" in their home mortgage by simply refinancing. Our "strong economy" is a falsehood made up by the Bush spinners: "Good news on budget masks grim longer-term view Bush credits his tax cuts, surging revenues with deficit drop, but analysts look to future" Here's the full story: http://tinyurl.com/hjy5f |
#4
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On 12 Jul 2006 09:24:28 -0700, "basskisser" wrote:
NOYB wrote: "Shortwave Sportfishing" wrote in message ... http://tinyurl.com/rc4vf "Our second quarter results are in line with our expectations," said Brunswick Chairman and Chief Executive Officer Dustan E. McCoy. "Throughout the key second quarter selling season for 2006-model-year marine products, however, we have experienced significant declines in retail demand, which has resulted in an increase in pipeline inventories. As we now enter the off- season, we can't rely solely on retail demand to rebalance the pipeline. So, we will be reducing further our production levels, leading to a lowering of our earnings estimate for the second half of the year. This is primarily due to reduced sales and the impact of fixed cost absorption from production cuts needed to adjust pipeline inventories. Although this will result in reduced margins, we believe that managing pipeline inventories is critical in a cyclical, as well as a seasonal, industry." Translation: "Oh oh - things ain't lookin' so good." :) Here's my take: Marine manufacturers took advantage of a strong economy and cheap money over the past 3 or 4 years, and increased their prices on new boats an awful lot. But now gas prices and higher interest rates have made enough people think twice about a new boat purchase, and folks just aren't jumping at 30' twin outboard boats that cost $200,000+ anymore. The other factor hurting them is that people don't have a bunch of untapped equity in their homes anymore, so they can't make a boat payment "disappear" in their home mortgage by simply refinancing. Our "strong economy" is a falsehood made up by the Bush spinners: "Good news on budget masks grim longer-term view Bush credits his tax cuts, surging revenues with deficit drop, but analysts look to future" Here's the full story: http://tinyurl.com/hjy5f I *think* the topic was boats, not Bush. At $4 a gallon for a day of boating, I'll spend close to $130. (Four hours at 8gph). To fill my tank costs $400. Does that impact my boating? For sure. As one does less boating, one finds other pursuits of interest. Given this, the desire for a new boat tends to wane. -- ****************************************** ***** Have a Spectacular Day! ***** ****************************************** John |
#5
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![]() "basskisser" wrote in message ups.com... NOYB wrote: "Shortwave Sportfishing" wrote in message ... http://tinyurl.com/rc4vf "Our second quarter results are in line with our expectations," said Brunswick Chairman and Chief Executive Officer Dustan E. McCoy. "Throughout the key second quarter selling season for 2006-model-year marine products, however, we have experienced significant declines in retail demand, which has resulted in an increase in pipeline inventories. As we now enter the off- season, we can't rely solely on retail demand to rebalance the pipeline. So, we will be reducing further our production levels, leading to a lowering of our earnings estimate for the second half of the year. This is primarily due to reduced sales and the impact of fixed cost absorption from production cuts needed to adjust pipeline inventories. Although this will result in reduced margins, we believe that managing pipeline inventories is critical in a cyclical, as well as a seasonal, industry." Translation: "Oh oh - things ain't lookin' so good." :) Here's my take: Marine manufacturers took advantage of a strong economy and cheap money over the past 3 or 4 years, and increased their prices on new boats an awful lot. But now gas prices and higher interest rates have made enough people think twice about a new boat purchase, and folks just aren't jumping at 30' twin outboard boats that cost $200,000+ anymore. The other factor hurting them is that people don't have a bunch of untapped equity in their homes anymore, so they can't make a boat payment "disappear" in their home mortgage by simply refinancing. Our "strong economy" is a falsehood made up by the Bush spinners: "Good news on budget masks grim longer-term view Bush credits his tax cuts, surging revenues with deficit drop, but analysts look to future" Here's the full story: http://tinyurl.com/hjy5f Since Bush has been president, "We've had the biggest education bill ever, the biggest farm bill ever, the biggest highway bill ever, and the biggest Medicare expansion ever," So why is the left so hard on the guy? He and the Republican Congress are spending money on all of the left's most favorite programs. |
#6
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![]() "NOYB" wrote in message ink.net... "basskisser" wrote in message ups.com... NOYB wrote: "Shortwave Sportfishing" wrote in message ... http://tinyurl.com/rc4vf "Our second quarter results are in line with our expectations," said Brunswick Chairman and Chief Executive Officer Dustan E. McCoy. "Throughout the key second quarter selling season for 2006-model-year marine products, however, we have experienced significant declines in retail demand, which has resulted in an increase in pipeline inventories. As we now enter the off- season, we can't rely solely on retail demand to rebalance the pipeline. So, we will be reducing further our production levels, leading to a lowering of our earnings estimate for the second half of the year. This is primarily due to reduced sales and the impact of fixed cost absorption from production cuts needed to adjust pipeline inventories. Although this will result in reduced margins, we believe that managing pipeline inventories is critical in a cyclical, as well as a seasonal, industry." Translation: "Oh oh - things ain't lookin' so good." :) Here's my take: Marine manufacturers took advantage of a strong economy and cheap money over the past 3 or 4 years, and increased their prices on new boats an awful lot. But now gas prices and higher interest rates have made enough people think twice about a new boat purchase, and folks just aren't jumping at 30' twin outboard boats that cost $200,000+ anymore. The other factor hurting them is that people don't have a bunch of untapped equity in their homes anymore, so they can't make a boat payment "disappear" in their home mortgage by simply refinancing. Our "strong economy" is a falsehood made up by the Bush spinners: "Good news on budget masks grim longer-term view Bush credits his tax cuts, surging revenues with deficit drop, but analysts look to future" Here's the full story: http://tinyurl.com/hjy5f Since Bush has been president, "We've had the biggest education bill ever, the biggest farm bill ever, the biggest highway bill ever, and the biggest Medicare expansion ever," So why is the left so hard on the guy? He and the Republican Congress are spending money on all of the left's most favorite programs. He's borrowed more than all previous presidents COMBINED, even when adjusted for inflation. |
#7
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posted to rec.boats
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NOYB wrote:
"basskisser" wrote in message ups.com... NOYB wrote: "Shortwave Sportfishing" wrote in message ... http://tinyurl.com/rc4vf "Our second quarter results are in line with our expectations," said Brunswick Chairman and Chief Executive Officer Dustan E. McCoy. "Throughout the key second quarter selling season for 2006-model-year marine products, however, we have experienced significant declines in retail demand, which has resulted in an increase in pipeline inventories. As we now enter the off- season, we can't rely solely on retail demand to rebalance the pipeline. So, we will be reducing further our production levels, leading to a lowering of our earnings estimate for the second half of the year. This is primarily due to reduced sales and the impact of fixed cost absorption from production cuts needed to adjust pipeline inventories. Although this will result in reduced margins, we believe that managing pipeline inventories is critical in a cyclical, as well as a seasonal, industry." Translation: "Oh oh - things ain't lookin' so good." :) Here's my take: Marine manufacturers took advantage of a strong economy and cheap money over the past 3 or 4 years, and increased their prices on new boats an awful lot. But now gas prices and higher interest rates have made enough people think twice about a new boat purchase, and folks just aren't jumping at 30' twin outboard boats that cost $200,000+ anymore. The other factor hurting them is that people don't have a bunch of untapped equity in their homes anymore, so they can't make a boat payment "disappear" in their home mortgage by simply refinancing. Our "strong economy" is a falsehood made up by the Bush spinners: "Good news on budget masks grim longer-term view Bush credits his tax cuts, surging revenues with deficit drop, but analysts look to future" Here's the full story: http://tinyurl.com/hjy5f Since Bush has been president, "We've had the biggest education bill ever, the biggest farm bill ever, ^ He repaid big Ag for their contributions to his election/reelection. the biggest highway bill ever ^ He repaid Road builders Inc for their contributions, and the biggest Medicare expansion ever," ^ It has been made abundantly clear by every aspect of the Medical establishment that part D is designed to boost the Pharmaceutical industry. In short he overspent our taxes to line the pockets of his "constituency." He gave his "constituency" a tax cut but not all Americans. I'm not a leftie. I'm more conservative than anything short of the Constitution. So why is the left so hard on the guy? He and the Republican Congress are spending money on all of the left's most favorite programs. |
#8
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posted to rec.boats
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![]() basskisser wrote: NOYB wrote: "Shortwave Sportfishing" wrote in message ... http://tinyurl.com/rc4vf "Our second quarter results are in line with our expectations," said Brunswick Chairman and Chief Executive Officer Dustan E. McCoy. "Throughout the key second quarter selling season for 2006-model-year marine products, however, we have experienced significant declines in retail demand, which has resulted in an increase in pipeline inventories. As we now enter the off- season, we can't rely solely on retail demand to rebalance the pipeline. So, we will be reducing further our production levels, leading to a lowering of our earnings estimate for the second half of the year. This is primarily due to reduced sales and the impact of fixed cost absorption from production cuts needed to adjust pipeline inventories. Although this will result in reduced margins, we believe that managing pipeline inventories is critical in a cyclical, as well as a seasonal, industry." Translation: "Oh oh - things ain't lookin' so good." :) Here's my take: Marine manufacturers took advantage of a strong economy and cheap money over the past 3 or 4 years, and increased their prices on new boats an awful lot. But now gas prices and higher interest rates have made enough people think twice about a new boat purchase, and folks just aren't jumping at 30' twin outboard boats that cost $200,000+ anymore. The other factor hurting them is that people don't have a bunch of untapped equity in their homes anymore, so they can't make a boat payment "disappear" in their home mortgage by simply refinancing. Our "strong economy" is a falsehood made up by the Bush spinners: "Good news on budget masks grim longer-term view Bush credits his tax cuts, surging revenues with deficit drop, but analysts look to future" Here's the full story: http://tinyurl.com/hjy5f Do you have something useful to contribute to this topic, or are you simply going to hang out here and wait for any opportunity to take it political? |
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