Just picked up "a few things " this AM ... " Was " = 2 months ago)
Small bottle of Argon was so high I switched to the dirty flux core mig wire. 10 lb spool of 0.30 Mig wire $60 (was $39) 4 cans of 3M Super 90 Spray adhesive $98....( was $54) 4' of 1/2 hollow metal tube $18 ( Was $8) 6 x 18 sheet metal $ 11 ( was $7) Roll of blue tape $12,99 ( was $ 7.99) $200 vs $116 just two months ago..... Insanity
............I truly don't know how our good friends Carey and Greg do it !
I really feel for Stan, can only imagine those invoices too ~
Thanks, Al. It's been a challenge, for sure. I need at least twice the working capital I used to, because a single skid of refrigerant is now $20K, and we buy one every month or two. Revenue was up 50% last year, but we made less money.
The stuff Carey was describing is every day - opening a box and having a part that used to be the gold standard of reliability actually fall apart in my hand, paying 2X for absolutely everything (and 5X for a lot of things), which assumes it's actually available to buy.
Right now we've got a condenser coil leaking on a remote unit - it's a small system, only holds 25 lbs or so of gas - but the gas is now $27/lb (up from $6/lb 20 months ago), and we're leaking 20 lbs/week. The coil (which used to be 2 days out) has a projected ship-date in early February - but that's been pushed back twice, so who really knows? We've got a local fish shop whose choice is to empty his frozen coffins or leak $500+ of gas out (plus the time to put it in) every week until... ? He's riding it right now, but if the ship-date keeps getting pushed back, who knows? That's a Faustian bargain for a small operator.
The big boys fixed-cost (things they can do nothing about) for energy and our repairs has doubled. A store that used to take $100K/yr in maintenance and repairs is running about $250K/yr now. I had a small-town independent grocer install a 100 Kw 3 ph stand-by generator because the electrical grid has become so unreliable. His energy bill is up 120%.
That says nothing about the cost of labor. Retail grocery is having such a difficult time finding help that the stores we service in Bloomington just went to a "gig-type" employment system. The store posts the available shifts, and employees can decide if they want to work them or not. They figure that if nobody shows up, it's really no different than what they have right now. It's staggeringly close to chaos.
If you think your groceries are expensive now, wait until these costs get built into the budget (they haven't been - the bigwigs all believed the fed and the pointy-heads in DC that inflation would be transitory).
The costs are staggering.