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" ... A second factor making third quarter’s growth rate look so glorious was that it was higher than the contraction in second quarter (-31.4%). Removing the effect of annualizing the data doesn’t change that fact. However, the problem is that the +33.1% was relative to a considerably smaller number than the -31.4%. Think of it this way. Say you had been earning a wage of $100/day and that this fell by 50%. You now earn $50/day. But then you get a raise of 60%–hooray, you’re ahead of where you started! Not so, because 60% of $50 is $30. You’re new salary is $80/day, still well below where you started, despite the fact that the 60% is greater than 50%. ... "
" ... Inventory turns for a SKU can be calculated by annualizing current COG (line J above / # of weeks of cost in data * 52) and then dividing that total by your on hand inventory (at cost). Calculating inventory turns (which indicate a SKU rate of sale) permits you to identify slow and fast movers so that you can make informed decisions about carrying those SKU’s in the future. You should have a turns goal in mind for each category of inventory. ... "
" ... This horrible second-quarter news needs perspective. One source emerges from the BEA’s preference for stating growth at annualized rates. The BEA does this because presenting all percent changes as if they persisted for a year makes for easy comparisons between growth rates that span different stretches of time. When looking at quarterly numbers, however, as this GDP report does, this practice of annualizing the rates also makes the numbers larger, in this case frighteningly so. Thus the annualized real GDP drop of 32.9 percent for the second quarter amounts to a quarterly drop of about 9.5 percent. Of course, a quarterly drop of nearly 10 percent is still scary, but it nonetheless looks much more surmountable than the much larger annualized figure. ... "