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We’ve updated your TraQline data with Q4 results!  Let us know how we can help you.

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Check the following link for an article published by ISI Group. The question is: What’s the impact of sales tax on Amazon’s sales? Here’s a short except from one of the key findings:

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Come see as the TraQline folks speak about Consumer Tech.

Consumer tech retailing has undergone tremendous changes over the last three years. The growing strength of online sales, consumers’ ability to price-compare and shop on mobile devices, and ever-shifting category leadership are having a huge strategic impact. A panel of today’s brightest retail analysts reveals what’s ahead.

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Finally, the firm said, “we think the P/E multiple is likely capped near-term given modest share loss according to government and TraQline numbers recently, an emerging online competitive threat and a weak macro backdrop marked by deterioration in the Architectural Billings Index, remodeling indexes and Banks’ Willingness to Lend Index.”

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Sears banks on its brands

On October 23, 2011 By

Sears stores held a 30.4 percent share of the appliance retail market for the year ended Sept. 30, based on revenue sales, according to Louisville, Ky.-based Stevenson TraQline’s quarterly market survey, released Friday. That figure is down from the four previous years. At its peak Sears’ share was about 40 percent.

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Numbers Can Be Deceiving

On May 23, 2011 By

That’s a heck of a headline to put on this column considering all the work TWICE, in partnership with The Stevenson Company, did in preparing this year’s TWICE Top 100 CE Retailers Report, which is traditionally one of the most awaited features we do each year….Amazingly this year’s Top 100 CE Retailers rankings, which track the prior year’s annual sales, show that about two and a half years into the “new normal” economy CE sales grew 5.8 percent at retail during 2010.

The same thing is true on the retail side. Barnes & Noble, on the strength of its Nook e-reader, in the words of Alan Wolf “blasted its way onto the rankings,” at No. 66. But that’s nothing compared to the new No. 4 on our list, Amazon. com, with a 72 percent increase in sales that now has both Walmart and Best Buy looking over its shoulders.

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