AP -- Fears escalated Monday that the global economy could struggle more than expected this year - a prospect that contributed to a plunge in financial markets. The anxiety was heightened by reports that manufacturers extended their slumps last month in the United States and China, the world''s two largest economies. Factory activity contracted for a second straight month in the United States and for a 10th straight month in China.
Visit http://hosted.ap.org/dynamic/stories/U/US_GLOBAL_ECONOMY?SITE=AP&SECTION=HOME&TEMPLATE=DEFAULT to view the full article online.
|
The Wall Street Journal -- Retail imports at U.S. ports are declining in line with a seasonal post-holiday lull and are unlikely to grow beyond historic norms as store operators continue to cope with stubbornly high inventories, a retail group said Friday. Beginning in November, import volumes at the nation''s major seaports fell below 1.5 million 20-foot equivalent units, a standard measure for cargo containers, according to the Global Port Tracker report by the National Retail Federation and Hackett Associates LLC.
Visit http://www.wsj.com/articles/ocean-imports-to-remain-flat-for-several-months-retail-report-says-1452288327 to view the full article online.
|
|
Industryweek -- Regions are creating manufacturing initiatives, countries are creating policies to lure manufacturing back and prepare the next generation of talent, maker fairs show entrepreneurs and small-scale artisans how they too can design and manufacture their own products, what manufacturers sell goes well beyond the 100-year-old recipe and the mechanical drawings, and new technologies are changing the economies of scale so that large- and small-scale value chains can be successful.
Visit http://www.industryweek.com/supply-chain/state-manufacturing-technology-2016-and-beyond to view the full article online.
|
CNN Money -- All of a sudden the doom-and-gloom crowd has lots to crow about: China is suffering a scary slowdown, Latin America is imploding and geopolitical threats are on the rise. And the U.S. stock market is off to its worst start to a year. Ever. Yet the optimists at Morgan Stanley believe the American economy will not only withstand this global turmoil, it may keep growing until at least 2020. That would make the much-criticized recovery from the Great Recession the longest U.S. expansion in the post-war period.
Visit http://money.cnn.com/2016/01/11/investing/longest-economic-recovery-ever/ to view the full article online.
|
MHI Blog -- Shark Tank''s Kevin O''Leary is the keynote speaker at MODEX 2016 on April 6 in Atlanta. O'Leary's success story starts where most entrepreneurs begin: with a big idea and no cash. From his basement, he launched SoftKey Software Products. As sales took off, he bought out almost every one of his software competitors, including Mindscape, Broderbund and the Learning Company in the industry''s first vicious public hostile battle. Shareholders loved his take-no-prisoners, cost-cutting style and fueled him with billions to do his deals.
Visit http://s354933259.onlinehome.us/mhi-blog/modex-keynote-kevin-olearys-top-10-rules-for-success/ to view the full article online.
|
Real-estate brokerage CBRE Inc. reports that the availability rate for industrial property - which means warehouses and distribution centers - fell to 9.4% in the fourth quarter of 2015, capping 23 consecutive quarters of falling availability, the longest such stretch since CBRE started following it in 1989.
Visit http://www.wsj.com/articles/warehouse-space-grew-tighter-in-4q-cbre-1452550270 to view the full article online.
|
MHL News -- What impact is this new generation having on the supply chain? This question was asked by eft (EyeforTransport) in their "Q1 2016 Hot Trends in Supply Chain and Logistics Report". Only around 12% of respondents representing LSPs, manufacturers, retailers and solution providers had businesses dominated by millennials.
Visit http://mhlnews.com/labor-management/how-millennials-are-affecting-supply-chain to view the full article online.
|
MHL News -- Collins says corporate''s most successful effort has been to weaken or eliminate unions. "But I wonder if their success may come back to haunt them -- and the country -- in the future." He wonders how manufacturing will be able to attract the workers it needs (and retain them) if they are not willing to give them bargaining power.
Visit http://mhlnews.com/labor-management/how-decline-unions-hurts-us-economy to view the full article online.
|
|