Peter Seltzer
Member
- Joined
- Oct 7, 2006
- Messages
- 11
I was just reading our local newspaper and the bakeries around here are really struggling due to the huge increase in the price of wheat to make flour.
It was $ 27.00 at Christmas and now the same 100lb bag is $ 57.00.
Typically there is a three month surplus now only 25 days. This is due to farmers switching over to subsidized crops such as ethanol.
This bakery has been a local favorite for over ninety years and has the best bakery style pizza I have ever had, thick crust with awesome sauce etc...
You can't drive by the place or you will have to do a u turn because you get hungry thinking about the pizza. The problem is the owners are raising their prices to cover the increases as we all do in our business. They are very concerned as the customers are not coming in as frequently so business is falling fast.
My good friend owns my local coffee and bagel shop and he told me his bagels have cost him double what he paid a year ago to buy them from the bagel guy. He just made it through the year by the skin of his teeth. His wife a school teacher just got laid off as well, Ouch! He now has to cover the health insurance. All the towns around here are laying off teachers etc.
Do I live in a bubble or is it the same where you all live.
My customers are asking me to give estimates now and seem very focused on cost. I think when gas hits $5.00 a gallon we will see a huge impact on our own service companies. I do not move the truck anymore unless it is to go to a scheduled job. I try to take the minivan.
My friend and customer owns an appliance store and service company and he charges $ 125.00 just to show up at the door and $ 110.00 per hour labor. His business is way off as well.
I know just add it into the cost of the job but that is BS. People seem to careless right now around here about cleaning their carpets.
Check out the article about mortgages and credit scores in today's Boston Globe at www.Boston.com, this is scary. I am trying to sell my house and between the new credit score requirements and the falling values of homes two potential buyers have been declined so far. I have lost 17% on a home worth $350,000.00 last year. It is a modest 130 year old colonial at the bottom of what is available in our town. The founder of EMC is building a sixty million dollar home and complex here in Hopkinton. It has a full indoor ice rink, horse stables, indoor pools it is incredible. The average home being built is a million plus now. The schools are great here so I am hopefull I can sell it quick, it is priced below market value and I want to get my equity out before things get worse. I have been here for a long time, 29 years.
Sorry about the tone of the post but I just was curious if the same is going on in your neck of the woods. In years past and very recent years in fact there were bidding wars on a home for sale around here. It was not unusual for a house to sell for fifty thousand over asking price. Times are a changing!
Happy Easter!
Peter
It was $ 27.00 at Christmas and now the same 100lb bag is $ 57.00.
Typically there is a three month surplus now only 25 days. This is due to farmers switching over to subsidized crops such as ethanol.
This bakery has been a local favorite for over ninety years and has the best bakery style pizza I have ever had, thick crust with awesome sauce etc...
You can't drive by the place or you will have to do a u turn because you get hungry thinking about the pizza. The problem is the owners are raising their prices to cover the increases as we all do in our business. They are very concerned as the customers are not coming in as frequently so business is falling fast.
My good friend owns my local coffee and bagel shop and he told me his bagels have cost him double what he paid a year ago to buy them from the bagel guy. He just made it through the year by the skin of his teeth. His wife a school teacher just got laid off as well, Ouch! He now has to cover the health insurance. All the towns around here are laying off teachers etc.
Do I live in a bubble or is it the same where you all live.
My customers are asking me to give estimates now and seem very focused on cost. I think when gas hits $5.00 a gallon we will see a huge impact on our own service companies. I do not move the truck anymore unless it is to go to a scheduled job. I try to take the minivan.
My friend and customer owns an appliance store and service company and he charges $ 125.00 just to show up at the door and $ 110.00 per hour labor. His business is way off as well.
I know just add it into the cost of the job but that is BS. People seem to careless right now around here about cleaning their carpets.
Check out the article about mortgages and credit scores in today's Boston Globe at www.Boston.com, this is scary. I am trying to sell my house and between the new credit score requirements and the falling values of homes two potential buyers have been declined so far. I have lost 17% on a home worth $350,000.00 last year. It is a modest 130 year old colonial at the bottom of what is available in our town. The founder of EMC is building a sixty million dollar home and complex here in Hopkinton. It has a full indoor ice rink, horse stables, indoor pools it is incredible. The average home being built is a million plus now. The schools are great here so I am hopefull I can sell it quick, it is priced below market value and I want to get my equity out before things get worse. I have been here for a long time, 29 years.
Sorry about the tone of the post but I just was curious if the same is going on in your neck of the woods. In years past and very recent years in fact there were bidding wars on a home for sale around here. It was not unusual for a house to sell for fifty thousand over asking price. Times are a changing!
Happy Easter!
Peter