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Could someone explain the core example about prepaying restaurant vendors? (Kokonas again): That’s what I said! I went, “I’ll pay you $20 if you tell me why.” And he said, “Well, it’s very simple. I have to slaughter the cows, then I put the beef to dry. For the first 35 days I can sell it. After 35 days there’s only a handful of places that would buy it, after 60 days, I sell it $1 a pound for dog food.” So his waste on the slaughter, and these animals’s lives, and the ethics of all of that, are because of net-120! Seems like someone should have figured this out! As soon as he said that, everything clicked, and I went “We need to call every one of our vendors, every time, and say that we will prepay them.” It seems like the value to the beef vendor is not from actually receiving the cash flow earlier, but rather from just knowing the order quantity in advance to optimize inventory. |
1. Beef that sells within 35 days at regular price 2. Beef that sells within 60 days as a discounted price 3. Beef that sells after 60 days for a loss.
The beef's regular price has to be somewhat higher than in an efficient market because some of it will be sold at a loss.
Getting an order for a set amount per week allows him to disregard the losses he normally has from beef that has to be sold for dog food, because the purchaser is guaranteeing their quantity, smoothing their expectations on how much beef to purchase in the future.
It's possible that at $18 a pound, without any waste, he's making the same margins/profit as he would at $34 with some waste.