Skip to content
World Today News
  • Business
  • Entertainment
  • Health
  • News
  • Sport
  • Technology
  • World
World Today News
  • Business
  • Entertainment
  • Health
  • News
  • Sport
  • Technology
  • World
Friday, December 5, 2025
World Today News
World Today News
  • Business
  • Entertainment
  • Health
  • News
  • Sport
  • Technology
  • World
Copyright 2021 - All Right Reserved
Home » Retail and wholesale » Page 2
Tag:

Retail and wholesale

World

Extortion strangling Mexican businesses, forcing closures and fear

by Lucas Fernandez – World Editor July 11, 2025
written by Lucas Fernandez – World Editor

Extortion Crisis Chokes Mexico City Businesses

Small business owners face rising threats and closures amidst escalating crime.

In Mexico City, a surge in extortion is crippling businesses, with many owners forced to shutter their doors after years of relentless threats. Organized crime groups are largely responsible, and authorities struggle to keep pace.

Demands and Threats

It began with a phone call to a men’s clothing store in Mexico City’s historic center. The caller demanded weekly payments of 10,000 pesos ($500). When the owner refused, the voice on the other end threatened “Well, prepare to face the consequences.”

After years of escalating intimidation, armed robberies, and visits from thugs, the owner, fearing for their safety, made the difficult decision to close the store that his grandfather started in 1936.

Mounting Losses and Rising Cases

According to the Mexican Employers’ Association, Coparmex, extortion cost businesses around $1.3 billion in 2023. Despite declines in other major crimes, extortion continues to climb, with a 10% increase nationally in the first quarter compared to last year.

In Mexico City, the number of reported cases nearly doubled in the first five months of 2025, reaching 498, according to federal crime data. This marks the highest total in the past six years.

Pedestrians walk along Francisco I. Madero Avenue in downtown Mexico City. (AP Photo/Fernando Llano)

A Systemic Problem

After the initial extortion attempt in 2019, the store owner stopped answering the phone for months. When the demands started again in 2021, he avoided the shop and managed it remotely, following advice from his attorneys.

During one robbery, employees were held at gunpoint, tied up, and locked in a bathroom while the criminals stole money. After two years of threats, the owner reported the crime to the authorities.

The investigation stalled due to lack of evidence. The owner noted that the investigators demanded proof that he couldn’t provide. The threats were only verbal.

Extortion strangling Mexican businesses, forcing closures and fear
Mexico City police patrol a neighborhood. (AP Photo/Marco Ugarte)

Underreporting and Fear

Most extortion cases go unreported. Mexico’s National Institute for Statistics and Geography estimates that around 97% of extortions go unreported.

This reluctance stems from fear and a belief that authorities can’t or won’t help. Mexico City Police Chief Pablo Vázquez Camacho acknowledged that police are receiving more reports but recognize that many more cases remain hidden. “We can’t solve something that we’re not even seeing or that isn’t being reported,” said Vázquez.

Vicente Gutiérrez Camposeco, president of the Mexico City Chamber of Commerce, stated that the problem “has become entrenched” in Mexico, especially in the capital.

Daniel Bernardi, whose family has run a popsicle shop in the historic center for 85 years, accepted the situation, saying, “There isn’t much to do. You pay when you have to pay.”

Mexico City’s Secretary of Security Pablo Vázquez Camacho during an interview.
Mexico City’s Secretary of Security Pablo Vázquez Camacho during an interview. (AP Photo/Marco Ugarte)

Government Response

To combat the rising crisis, the Mexico City prosecutor’s office created a special prosecutor’s office to investigate and prosecute extortion cases.

In July, President Claudia Sheinbaum announced plans for legislation to grant the government greater powers against extortionists. A national strategy was also unveiled this week, including a hotline for anonymous reporting, immediate cancellation of phone numbers linked to extortion, local anti-extortion units, and the involvement of Mexico’s Financial Intelligence Unit to freeze related bank accounts.

Cartel Influence

The expansion of extortion is fueled by the large profits it generates for organized crime, drawing in powerful drug cartels like the Sinaloa and Jalisco New Generation cartels. Security analyst David Saucedo explained that these cartels have made extortion “one of the divisions of their criminal portfolios.”

Additionally, small-time criminals exploit the fear created by the cartels by running their own extortion schemes, posing as members of larger groups.

The clothing store owner, unsure of who was extorting him, felt vulnerable without help from authorities. The threats had intensified, indicating they would kill him if he didn’t comply.

In December 2023, the owner made the difficult decision to close the store. The closure brought sadness and anger, knowing that fear had robbed him of his livelihood. “When I closed I felt very sad. And then it made me so mad to think that I could still go on, but because of fear I couldn’t,” he said. “You work your whole life for them to destroy it.”

July 11, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
Business

Amazon doubles Prime Day to a four-day event

by Priya Shah – Business Editor July 8, 2025
written by Priya Shah – Business Editor

NEW YORK (AP) — Amazon is extending its annual Prime Day sales and offering new membership perks to Gen Z shoppers amid tariff-related price worries and possibly some consumer boredom with an event marking its 11th year.

The e-commerce giant’s promised blitz of summer deals for Prime members starts at 3:01 a.m. Eastern time on Tuesday. For the first time, Seattle-based Amazon is holding the now-misnamed Prime Day over four days; the company launched the event in 2015 and expanded it to two days in 2019.

Before wrapping up Prime Day 2025 early Friday, Amazon said it would have deals dropping as often as every 5 minutes during certain periods. Prime members ages 18-24, who pay $7.49 per month instead of the $14.99 that older customers not eligible for discounted rates pay for free shipping and other benefits, will receive 5% cash back on their purchases for a limited time.

Amazon executives declined to comment on the potential impact of tariffs on Prime Day deals. The event is taking place two and a half months after an online news report sparked speculation that Amazon planned to display added tariff costs next to product prices on its website.

White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt denounced the purported change as a “hostile and political act” before Amazon clarified the idea had been floated for its low-cost Haul storefront but never approved.

Amazon’s past success with using Prime Day to drive sales and attract new members spurred other major retail chains to schedule competing sales in July. Best Buy, Target and Walmart are repeating the practice this year.

Like Amazon, Walmart is adding two more days to its promotional period, which starts Tuesday and runs through July 13. The nation’s largest retailer is making its summer deals available in stores as well as online for the first time.

Here’s what to expect:

More days might not mean more spending

Table of Contents

  • More days might not mean more spending
  • Tariffs don’t seem to be impacting costs much (so far)
  • Shoppers might focus on necessities
  • A look at the discounts
  • Some third-party sellers will sit out Prime Day

Amazon expanded Prime Day this year because shoppers “wanted more time to shop and save,” Amazon Prime Vice President Jamil Ghani recently told The Associated Press.

Analysts are unsure the extra days will translate into more purchases given that renewed inflation worries and potential price increases from tariffs may make consumers less willing to spend. Amazon doesn’t disclose Prime Day sales figures but said last year that the event achieved record global sales.

Adobe Digital Insights predicts that the sales event will drive $23.8 billion in overall online spending from July 8 to July 11, 28.4% more than the similar period last year. In 2024 and 2023, online sales increased 11% and 6.1% during the comparable four days of July.

Vivek Pandya, lead analyst at Adobe Digital Insights, noted that Amazon’s move to stretch the sales event to four days is a big opportunity to “really amplify and accelerate the spending velocity.”

Caila Schwartz, director of consumer insights and strategy at software company Salesforce, noted that July sales in general have lost some momentum in recent years. Amazon is not a Salesforce Commerce Cloud customer, so the business software company doesn’t have access to the online giant’s e-commerce sales and so is not privy to Prime Day figures.

“What we saw last year was that (shoppers) bought and then they were done, ” Schwartz said. “We know that the consumer is still really cautious. So it’s likely we could see a similar pattern where they come out early, they’re ready to buy and then they take a step back.”

Tariffs don’t seem to be impacting costs much (so far)

Amazon executives reported in May that the company and many of its third-party sellers tried to beat big import tax bills by stocking up on foreign goods before President Donald Trump’s tariffs took effect. And because of that move, a fair number of third-party sellers hadn’t changed their pricing at that time, Amazon said.

Adobe Digital Insights’ Pandya expects discounts to remain on par with last year and for other U.S. retail companies to mark 10% to 24% off the manufacturers’ suggested retail price between Tuesday and Friday.

Salesforce’s Schwartz said she’s noticed retailers becoming more precise with their discounts, such as offering promotion codes that apply to selected products instead of their entire websites.

Shoppers might focus on necessities

Amazon Prime and other July sales have historically helped jump-start back-to-school spending and encouraged advance planners to buy other seasonal merchandise earlier. Analysts said they expected U.S. consumers to make purchases this week out of fear that tariffs will make items more expensive later.

Brett Rose, CEO of United National Consumer Supplies, a wholesale distributor of overstocked goods like toys and beauty products, thinks shoppers will go for items like beauty essentials.

“They’re going to buy more everyday items,” he said.

A look at the discounts

As in past years, Amazon offered early deals leading up to Prime Day. For the big event, Amazon said it would have special discounts on Alexa-enabled products like Echo, Fire TV and Fire tablets.

Walmart said its July sale would include a 32-inch Samsung smart monitor priced at $199 instead of $299.99; and $50 off a 50-Inch Vizio Smart TV with a standard retail price of $298.00. Target said it was maintaining its 2024 prices on key back-to-school items, including a $5 backpack and a selection of 20 school supplies totaling less than $20.

Some third-party sellers will sit out Prime Day

Independent businesses that sell goods through Amazon account for more than 60% of the company’s retail sales. Some third-party sellers are expected to sit out Prime Day and not offer discounts to preserve their profit margins during the ongoing tariff uncertainty, analysts said.

Rose, of United National Consumer Supplies, said he spoke with third-party sellers who said they would rather take a sales hit this week than use up a lot of their pre-tariffs inventory now and risk seeing their profit margins suffer later.

However, some independent businesses that market their products on Amazon are looking to Prime Day to make a dent in the inventory they built up earlier in the year to avoid tariffs.

Home fragrance company Outdoor Fellow, which makes about 30% of its sales through Amazon’s marketplace, gets most of its candle lids, labels, jars, reed diffusers and other items from China, founder Patrick Jones said. Fearing high costs from tariffs, Jones stocked up at the beginning of the year, roughly doubling his inventory.

For Prime Day, he plans to offer bigger discounts, such as 32% off the price of a candle normally priced at $34, Jones said.

“All the product that we have on Amazon right now is still from the inventory that we got before the tariffs went into effect,” he said. “So we’re still able to offer the discount that we’re planning on doing.”

Jones said he was waiting to find out if the order he placed in June will incur large customs duties when the goods arrive from China in a few weeks.

___

AP Business Writer Mae Anderson contributed to this report.

July 8, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
Newer Posts
Older Posts

Search:

Recent Posts

  • Title: Post-COVID’s Invisible Impact: A Teacher’s Plea for Understanding

    December 5, 2025
  • Title: Léon Marchand sets new time at US Open, eyeing Olympic medals

    December 5, 2025
  • Title: Bulldogs Release Joseph O’Neill to St George Illawarra Dragons

    December 5, 2025
  • King Charles’ godchild India Hicks reveals cancer diagnosis

    December 5, 2025
  • Computer Game “Routine”: Moon Horror & 80s Sci-Fi

    December 5, 2025

Follow Me

Follow Me
  • Live News Feeds
  • Short Important News
  • Most Important News
  • Headlinez
  • Most Recommended Web Hosting
  • About Us
  • Accessibility statement
  • California Privacy Notice (CCPA/CPRA)
  • Contact
  • Cookie Policy
  • Copyright Notice
  • Disclaimer
  • DMCA Policy
  • EDITORIAL TEAM
  • Links
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms & Conditions

@2025 - All Right Reserved.

Hosted by Byohosting – Most Recommended Web Hosting – for complains, abuse, advertising contact: contact@world-today-news.com


Back To Top
World Today News
  • Business
  • Entertainment
  • Health
  • News
  • Sport
  • Technology
  • World
World Today News
  • Business
  • Entertainment
  • Health
  • News
  • Sport
  • Technology
  • World
@2025 - All Right Reserved.

Hosted by Byohosting – Most Recommended Web Hosting – for complains, abuse, advertising contact: contact@world-today-news.com