Peter Creasey
Peter Creasey
Given the threat of new tariffs on French wines, I wonder what we as consumers can expect in the way of price escalation(s) if the tariffs go into effect.
. . . . . Pete
. . . . . Pete
originally posted by robert ames:
righto. and when the euro goes up in relation to the dollar, u.s. wine prices go up equally. when the euro falls, the prices don't drop nearly so much.
originally posted by Jonathan Loesberg:
Not much I'd guess. The dollar is already quite strong against the Euro and the damage of Brexit will be mostly to the UK, or what will be left of it. But, unlike chicken soup, it can't help the Euro.
originally posted by Christian Miller (CMM):
originally posted by robert ames:
righto. and when the euro goes up in relation to the dollar, u.s. wine prices go up equally. when the euro falls, the prices don't drop nearly so much.
I disagree. US domestic prices are capped in the middle segments ($5-15 or maybe $5-20 per 750ml equivalent) by wholesale oligopolies and big retail buyers. Overall, grape prices (and to a lesser extent wine) prices react most strongly to over/under supply (real and perceived). Average price of wine sold has been rising steadily, but that is due to trading up, not price increases of individual wines.
originally posted by VLM:
originally posted by Christian Miller (CMM):
originally posted by robert ames:
righto. and when the euro goes up in relation to the dollar, u.s. wine prices go up equally. when the euro falls, the prices don't drop nearly so much.
I disagree. US domestic prices are capped in the middle segments ($5-15 or maybe $5-20 per 750ml equivalent) by wholesale oligopolies and big retail buyers. Overall, grape prices (and to a lesser extent wine) prices react most strongly to over/under supply (real and perceived). Average price of wine sold has been rising steadily, but that is due to trading up, not price increases of individual wines.
That's not been my experience. For the most part, I'm buying the same wines, they just keep going up in price. You may mean this in more of a big picture way and not applied to consumers like myself.
originally posted by Tristan Welles:
I wish I knew where it was going. I'll be reading Lucretius instead.
originally posted by Todd Abrams:
originally posted by Tristan Welles:
I wish I knew where it was going. I'll be reading Lucretius instead.
What’s a good wine pairing with de rerum natura? If we can assume Lucretius was Roman aristocracy, perhaps he was drinking ancient Sangiovese while working on his epic?
originally posted by Jonathan Loesberg:
I thought almost nothing was known about Lucretius' life other than some connection with the senator to whom he dedicated Dr Rarum Natura [sic]. But I don't know much about him. What's the basis for guessing he was an aristocrat?
originally posted by Jonathan Loesberg:
I read the Greenblatt book and don't remember what he said. What does he conclude? I have to say that Renaissance Self-Fashioning and the book on Hamlet and Purgatio are stunning books, but the stuff that makes him bucks are well-written but forgettable.
originally posted by Jonathan Loesberg:
I certainly do not mean to defend Greenblatt's book. It was a popularizing essay. But is the idea that Lucretius was an atheist really that doubtful. All I know is de Rerum Natura, but it would be the first thing I would conclude from that.