Tag: Amazon

Royal Mail loses contract with Amazon

Royal Mail today confirmed that online retailer Amazon has decided it will move its Second Class mailings, worth £8m, from Royal Mail.

Royal Mail said, “We’re very proud to work with Amazon and the loss of such a significant piece of their business demonstrates very clearly that Royal Mail’s higher costs, directly caused by our failure to fully modernise our operations, are costing us business. It’s vital that we urgently change and modernise if we are to be able to compete against more efficient rivals who have already done so.

“At the same time our customers are being threatened with disruption because of strikes – strikes which are aimed at preventing exactly the modernisation that could keep our big customers on board.

“Customers like Amazon are critical to us, and to our competitors. They represent an important area of growth in a market which is otherwise declining as fewer items of mail are sent.”

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Amazon.ca Teams with Canada Post to Deliver the Final Harry Potter Book to Customers' Doorsteps on July 21 for the Same Price as Express Shipping

Just as it has done for previous Harry Potter books, Amazon.ca today confirmed that it has teamed with Canada Post to deliver “Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows” to the doorsteps of excited fans across Canada on Saturday, July 21, the same day the book goes on sale to the public. Release-date delivery, which is the same price as Amazon.ca’s express shipping, is guaranteed to qualified addresses in Canada or the cost of the book will be refunded.

Offered at $22.50, a 50 percent discount, “Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows” became Amazon.ca’s current No. 1 bestselling book the same day it became available for pre-order on February 1, 2007. Amazon.ca saw an 825 percent increase in first-day pre-orders of “Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows” compared to the sixth book. The seventh and final book has been so popular with Amazon.ca customers that the online retailer sold more copies of it in the first 30 hours than the company did of the sixth book in the first 30 days of its pre-order period.

To place an order for “Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows” and to explore Amazon.ca’s entire selection of Harry Potter products – including books, DVDs, computer and video games, journals and stationery, and more – visit www.amazon.ca/harrypotter.

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Homebase sales take shine off Home Retail

Home Retail Group has posted a jump in profits for last year, despite weaker sales at its Homebase chain.
The group, which also owns Argos, said this morning that it had beaten analyst expectations with a pre-tax profit before exceptional items of GBP 376m in the year to March 2006. This was a 12% jump on the previous year.
Total group sales were up 6% to GBP 5.85bn. Chief executive Terry Duddy said this meant the company had now captured 10% of the total UK home merchandise market.
Argos achieved a 2.4% rise in like-for-like sales, which Mr Duddy said was partly due to last year’s World Cup – which sparked a surge in sales of new televisions.
But Homebase’s like-for-like sales dropped by 1.4%, due to disappointing sales of DIY and home decorating products. This follows a 3.1% drop in comparable sales the previous year.
Shares in the company opened down 1.75p at GBP 4.54, but analysts were encouraged by today’s results.
“Argos is generating like-for-like sales growth, whilst Homebase appears to have arrested the decline in like-for-like sales and the group continues to expand its store numbers for each,” said Keith Bowman, equity analyst at Hargreaves Lansdown.
“Distribution remains a key strength at Argos, with internet orders up by 45% and now representing over 16% of total sales. It could perhaps be argued that Argos is slowly becoming the Amazon of the UK.”
Home Retail Group declined to give any details of current trading this morning, but cautioned that this year would be challenging given recent interest rate rises.
“In addition, comparatives for the retail market as a whole, and particularly Argos, become tougher as we start to face last year’s positive impacts of the World Cup,” the group warned.

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Pitney Bowes – Chairman & CEO Interview

BECKY QUICK, CNBC ANCHOR: Next year is looking a whole lot greener for the U.S. Postal Service. An overhaul bill passed through the Senate over this last weekend. And that is set to relieve the Postal Service of billions of dollars in retirement expenses and keep the cost of postage down. Of course, the president still needs to give his stamp of approval on this whole thing. So let`s get into what is at stake for business with Michael Critelli. He is the chairman and CEO of Pitney Bowes.Michael, thanks for being with us today.

MICHAEL CRITELLI, CHMN. CEO, PITNEY BOWES: You are very welcome, Becky.

QUICK: You know, we have heard a lot about this bill that is out there. What is it actually? What would it do? And what does it mean for business?

CRITELLI: Well, you know, we are in a USD900 billion industry that employs 10 million Americans. It stabilizes the Postal Service financially by fixing and funding its retirement obligations. It sets an annual cap on price increases of the CPI, the consumer price index. And it gives the Postal Service the same ability that we are used to with utilities, airlines and other people, promotional rates, off-peak rates, discounts for other benefits to promote the use of mail, all of that that is now possible, that just wasn`t possible under the old law. And that will start to go into effect in 2008.

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