Here is a simple overview of how a rebate with CPG works. Company X
puts a rebate on its product, let’s say for $20. Company X expects to
pay out 5000 of these rebates to consumers. Company X would then put
the $100,000 needed to cover that rebate into CPG’s bank accounts. CPG
basically escrows the money for consumers. CPG is trusted with this
money in order to make sure the consumer is “safe.”
We have it from good sources currently that CPG owes consumers
somewhere in the neighborhood of $9M to $12M worth of rebates. The
problem here is that CPG currently only has about $3M in cash to cover
that $9M-$12M in rebates owed to the consumer. Where that money has
gone to is anyone’s guess and we will leave speculation up the law
enforcement authorities and the courts.
Currently CPG is contacting its customers telling them that they will
need to yet again deposit money into CPG accounts in order for CPG to
have the cash to cover rebate checks to consumers. This is money that
companies have already paid CPG previously. CPG is telling its
customers that if they do not pony up AGAIN, consumer rebate check payments
are in jeopardy. In our example above, CPG is not sure where the
$100,000 is that Company X paid them, but we are sure that they want
another $100,000 or CPG will start bouncing consumers’ MIR checks.
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Yes, they have a one-word term for black market, "naleva", literally on the left; i.e. taking with the left hand. No doubt we'll have our own word. We are after all a nation of bootleggers at heart. Fuck Elliot Ness.
ReplyDeleteCasca
I have a few Cuban friends that escaped from Cuba. They are so used to cheating the system they don't know any other way.
ReplyDeleteI call for an immediate 50 billion dollar bailout of the rebate industry, even if it is in Canada.
ReplyDeleteSigned,
your congressman
I do not use rebates, way too much hassle. They know some percentage of buyers won't bother or won't file correctly and they get to keep the money. That money is in their bank for weeks or months, not yours. It also puts my info in one more database. If they want to discount something, just friggin' do it. Think about it: we're supposed to get excited about overpaying for something and then applying and waiting to get the excess back. AWM don't play that. Cash 'n' carry only.
ReplyDeleteOur whole house and most of the people I know have stopped using gift cards, too. That's money you're putting into somebody else's bank bank account, and they like to impose fees, time limits for using them, etc. If the compnay goes under, they'll take your money with them. I think Walmart and some others have declared they won't do that kind of stuff anymore, but it's too late.
AWM
One other thing - the $100,000 that was paid to CPG is based on an estimate of how many people will claim the rebate. Obviously not everyone will and some will simply mess up by filing to late, filling in the form incorrectly and so forth.
ReplyDeleteAs times get tough more people will claim so it's quite possible the $100,000 should really be $150,000 or $200,000. If CPG is essentially acting as a pass through in order to minimize the paperwork they have every right to go back to the original client and ask for the additional funds.
I've been doing the rebate thing (only in America!) since I came here 13 years ago. Have always got my money. The trick is to follow their instructions to the letter and call/email/hassle them if you don't get the check by the due date.
ReplyDeleteI'm with annoyed-I don't roll that way, if you want to discount the thing, discount it at the POS.
ReplyDeleteWith a possible cap and trade, higher sales taxes, higher income taxes...etc, we are going to become a nation of tax cheats. Right now, several of my clients, buy and sell quite a bit off the books. Are there some industries that can not avoid paying all of their taxes? I don't believe that for a second.
When the confiscation line is crossed, what ever that line is in an individual's head, then the wheels start turning.
MM