Coresight Research data shows that the number of people who bought groceries online from Walmart jumped to 37.4% in 2019 from 25.5% in 2018, with the number of Walmart’s online grocery shoppers more than doubling over the past year. Though still a small portion of online shopping activity, Walmart’s growth in online grocery coincides with an increase in U.S. online grocery sales overall.
Joe Friday has a way with words.Walmart’s digital efforts paying off in battle with Amazon
By Tonya Garcia
https://www.marketwatch.com/story/wa...zon-2019-05-16
Originally Posted by eccieuser9500
Can't handle the real facts that are available for all sentient human beings to read and understand, can ya?You're the one that can't handle facts. The average income per capitia in the state of Mississippi is the lowest in the USA. Your little graph of home ownership is meaningless. The property in Mississippi is DIRT cheap. No wonder Wacko kid would rather drive around Mississippi.
St Louis Fed Originally Posted by I B Hankering
You're the one that can't handle facts. The average income per capitia in the state of Mississippi is the lowest in the USA. Your little graph of home ownership is meaningless. The property in Mississippi is DIRT cheap. No wonder Wacko kid would rather drive around Mississippi.You'd be the one who doesn't get it. You just fucking admitted that the cost of living in Mississippi is substantially lower than places like California and New York; so, the purchasing power of a dollar exceeds that of a dollar in your lib-retard ~paradise~! E.g., the price for a gallon of gas in California is almost $5; whereas, in Mississippi the cost for that same gallon of gas is nearer $2.50. So it's fucking evident that someone living in Mississippi with half the income of some counterpart living in California enjoys the same or higher standard of living: especially when it comes to home ownership -- as borne out by cited Federal statistics you unintelligently want to ignore.
https://www.infoplease.com/business-...l-income-state Originally Posted by adav8s28
if you say so .. Che. Originally Posted by The_Waco_Kid
The shift toward greater individual liberty changed the social contract. Previously, many resources were provided by those in power (land, food and protection) in exchange for significant contributions from citizens (for instance, from slave labour to hard labour with little pay, high taxes and unquestioning loyalty). With capitalism, people expected less from governing authorities, in exchange for greater civil liberties, including individual, political and economic freedom.
But capitalism would evolve significantly over the following centuries – and particularly so during the second half of the 20th Century.
06-01-2019 08:41 AM DEATH
Today 07:30 PM REBIRTH
NEXT RESUSCITATION OF CAPITALISM: ?
May 25, 2021
Why the next stage of capitalism is coming
Originally Posted by eccieuser9500
so .. given the total failure over history of socialism, which has failed massively at every level .. you finally admit capitalism is the only way forward. Originally Posted by The_Waco_Kid
Following the receiverships of Silicon Valley Bank and Signature Bank, there were outflows of uninsured deposits at a small number of banks. America’s financial system is among the best in the world, and America’s banks – large, midsize and community banks – do an extraordinary job serving the banking needs of their unique customers and communities. The banking system has strong credit, plenty of liquidity, strong capital and strong profitability. Recent events did nothing to change this.
The actions of America’s largest banks reflect their confidence in the country’s banking system. Together, we are deploying our financial strength and liquidity into the larger system, where it is needed the most. Smaller- and medium-sized banks support their local customers and businesses, create millions of jobs and help uplift communities. America’s larger banks stand united with all banks to support our economy and all of those around us.
Contacts
Jessica Oppenheim
Bank of America
646-855-1600
Jennifer Lowney
Citigroup
212-793-3141
Joseph Evangelisti
JPMorgan Chase
212-270-7438
Amy Bonitatibus
Wells Fargo
212-214-3020