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How Liquidating Unwanted Goods Became A $644 Billion Business - YouTube
Channel: CNBC
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Katie Schoolov: Inside this massive warehouse in Texas, the aisles aren't
lined with your typical merchandise.
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Unknown: This would be the antithesis of your traditional e-commerce
fulfillment center. This is a bundle of snowflakes where every individual
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box might have a different set of accessories, might be slightly different
in condition quality.
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Katie Schoolov: Every aisle is filled with returns from Amazon, Target,
Sony, Home Depot and more, in the process of being liquidated.
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Sonia Lapinsky: These liquidators are coming in and they're buying up all
of this product in bulk. They're then packaging, palletizing it and
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reselling it. So it's turned into a much bigger portion of the industry
than we've ever seen before.
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Katie Schoolov: Liquidation used to exist on the fringes of retail.
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Unknown: The liquidation marketplace used to be two people in a truck
coming into the back of a warehouse store with cash on the barrel, trying
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to have special deals for special people. It was very unsavory, very
unregulated.
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Tony Sciarrotta: We would shake hands with people at our tradeshows and
you'd want to go wash your hands afterwards. It was low life buyers. And
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now it's been raised to a new platform by companies like Liquidity
Services.
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Katie Schoolov: We went behind the scenes at Liquidity Services to see how
the only publicly traded liquidation company is helping turn the industry
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around.
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Unknown: We've sold road paving equipment, entire gymnasium floors,
scoreboards, postal trucks. We've sold delivery vehicles for utility
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companies.
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Katie Schoolov: Retail is in the midst of a transformation. Fueled in part
by the pandemic, online shopping was up more than 11% this holiday season,
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and with returns on average three times more likely for online purchases, a
record $761 billion dollars of merchandise was returned last year. Returns
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that aren't sent for liquidation are often destroyed: incinerated or sent
to landfills.
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Unknown: The reason the circular economy exists is to make sure these items
find a home and keep it out of the landfill system.
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Katie Schoolov: Now amid mounting pressure on retailers to do better, and a
supply chain backlog causing a shortage of new goods, there's a boom in the
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secondary market. Liquidation hasn't just gone mainstream, it's a $644
billion business.
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And in 2008, it was $309 billion. And now it's $644 billion. So it's more
than doubled over the last decade.
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Unknown: This warehouse is 130,000 square feet, and we'll do between 15 and
20 truckloads of product a day through this building.
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Katie Schoolov: We take you on an exclusive tour inside the wild, booming
business of processing and reselling excess and unwanted goods on the
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secondary market.
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With slim profit margins and unpredictable quality of secondhand inventory,
liquidation hasn't always been the business opportunity it is today.
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A lot of this used to be controlled by the mafia. It's a good way to hide
money, honestly, because nobody's looking at returns, especially 40 years
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ago no one was looking at returns.
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But in 2021, more than 16.5% of all merchandise sold was returned up more
than 56% from the year before. For online purchases, the average rate of
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return is even higher at 20.8% up from 18%. in 2020. Processing a return
can cost retailers up to 66% of an item's original price.
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Tony Sciarrotta: I would suggest that it's possible part of the inflation
is these huge amount of returns that have to be sold at a loss, is
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detracting from the profitability that a company normally has, and they
have to raise their prices.
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Katie Schoolov: And then there's the environmental cost. U.S. returns
generate an estimated 16 million metric tons of carbon emissions and create
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up to 5.8 billion pounds of landfill waste each year. And retailers like
Amazon, which says it doesn't send any items to a landfill, incinerate some
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returns as a last resort. But sustainable shopping options are a growing
priority for younger shoppers.
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Buying one used item, it saves 82% of its carbon footprint. The boom in
liquidation is really fueled by consumers wanting to buy those items and so
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it makes no sense to throw them in the garbage. They should be safely put
back into circulation.
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What's become a huge pain point for one retail sector is big business for
another. Today there are thousands of liquidation companies. The biggest
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ones contract with the Amazons and Targets of the world to receive returns
in bulk, then sort, process and sometimes refurbish them, then auction them
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off as individual items, pallets, or truckloads to other resellers or to
individual consumers, like a growing segment of YouTube creators who've
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gained a following by unboxing returns pallets.
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Unknown: It's like a fancy version of dumpster diving but slightly more
promising, safer and more legal. This is a good jacket, though. Tag still
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on it. $50.
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Katie Schoolov: Other resellers have side hustles on sites like eBay or
Poshmark.
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Unknown: Some of the auctions I've done, nobody else is bidding and that's
when I get really nervous that maybe this box isn't going to be that good.
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And there have been other ones where people are just going crazy and it's a
full out bidding war.
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Katie Schoolov: So this item here, it's probably going to go where and
auction off for what kind of price?
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Unknown: This probably has anywhere from $10,000 to $15,000 of retail
value. And we're going to sell that for anywhere from $3,000 to $5,000.
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Katie Schoolov: Bill Angrick founded Liquidity Services in 1999, with
$100,000 of his savings.
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Unknown: My father and I used to pick up used books. Fast forward to the
start of eBay, we realized that a marketplace model can create value for
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virtually any type of used item.
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Katie Schoolov: In 2000, Liquidity Services had its first major sale: a
$200,000 marine vessel for the state of Georgia. By 2002, Liquidity
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Services reached profitability. By 2006, it was listed on the New York
Stock Exchange, where it's seen a significant rise during the pandemic.
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Today, Liquidity Services handles returns for clients like Amazon, as well
as the Postal Service's unclaimed mail, items left behind at TSA
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checkpoints - think 14 pounds of assorted knives - and out-of-service
military vehicles and other gear.
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Unknown: Seven distribution centers, focusing on this circular economy
challenge for ecommerce retailers, with over a million square feet of
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space. And we've now eclipsed over 4.8 million buyers on the platform.
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Katie Schoolov: When pallets of returns arrive at this Liquidity Services
warehouse in Garland, Texas, just outside Dallas, the first step is to
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unwrap it and figure out what's inside and recycle all that packaging. This
machine here is a Styrofoam densifier and it takes a full pallet and a half
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of styrofoam and it condenses it down into this 20 pound block of melted
Styrofoam which then they send out to a third party which blows it back up
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into packing Styrofoam again.
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Unknown: Cardboard, we probably do about 200 tons a year of cardboard
recycled, 20 tons of Styrofoam a year, and about that same amount in
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electronics recycling.
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Katie Schoolov: We scan every item that comes in and make sure that they
can put it in the manifest.
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Items are sorted by workers like Carlotta Barnes, who's been at the Garland
warehouse for nine years.
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We take it out and make sure that the product is okay to sell.
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When items are ready for resale, they're wrapped back up. We see we've got
a couple Christmas trees. We got some decorative pillows, some furniture, a
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desk maybe. How much is something like this probably going to auction for?
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Unknown: So it's going to start for $100 on Liquidation.com. And then the
market is really going to set what that is going to sell for.
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Katie Schoolov: They're stacked into aisles, awaiting their turn for
auction on one of the Liquidity Services' marketplaces. There's
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Liquidation.com, where pallets of returns and some individual items are
auctioned off to the highest bidder. Secondipity for direct sale of
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individual items, and GovDeals for those unclaimed packages, TSA items or
outdated military equipment. While Liquidity Services is one of the biggest
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liquidators, there are thousands of companies in the booming space. One is
GoodBuy gear, which sells gently used baby and kids gear as an alternative
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to Facebook Marketplace or Craigslist.
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This space in particular really warrants a trusted third party because, you
know, it's stuff that your baby's going to sleep in or sit in and eat in.
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Kristin Langenfeld started GoodBuy Gear after her youngest, who's now six,
outgrew a particularly bulky item.
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It's $150 to buy it brand new and it was amazing for the few months that
she used it and then after that, zero use for it, you know. A big eyesore
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in the middle of your room.
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Another big player in the space is B-Stock, which runs branded liquidation
marketplaces for huge clients like Amazon, Walmart, Home Depot and Costco.
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Unknown: We sold somewhere in the vicinity of $150 million individual items
last year.
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Katie Schoolov: Howard Rosenberg founded B-Stock after six years at eBay,
where he saw the benefits of specializing in liquidation for others, at
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scale.
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Unknown: So companies typically don't want to spend a whole lot of time and
effort focused on that little slice of the pie. They want to focus on the
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99% slice of the pie.
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Katie Schoolov: Liquidated returns reenter the circular economy through
individuals selling on Craigslist or eBay, pawn shops, flea markets and
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thrift stores.
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Sonia Lapinsky: Wanting to reuse, wanting to have less of an impact on the
environment. They're also getting a good deal, right? Like we're being
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trained not to pay full price. And if you can kind of do both things at the
same time and get a good deal, I think that's what all the younger
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generations are about.
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Katie Schoolov: But a lot of returns can't go right back out for resale.
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Unknown: You can see it still has plastic on it from the original
manufacturer. And so we know this is a very new unit, never been used, but
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it was damaged during shipping. And what we can do is replace this glass
with a donor glass from a unit not functioning.
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Katie Schoolov: The refurbishment department is a big part of Liquidity
Services' business. And there's a lot of TVs here. How many are you doing
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every day, would you say?
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Unknown: We do about 100 TVs a day and they sell for anywhere from 60% to
70% of retail.
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My youngest has come and, you know, she's amazed by the machines and she's
asked a couple of questions.
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Katie Schoolov: Stephen Boykins relocated with three of his four kids to
manage the Garland warehouse. He's been with the company six years.
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Unknown: I try to explain it to her to where she understands and it's like,
hey, when you have kids, this directly will affect you and your kids. This
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little piece of the operation that no one thinks about will have a vast
effect over the next 50, 60 years.
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Katie Schoolov: Gen Z shoppers like Boykins kids have led a push for more
sustainable retail options, boosting the overall popularity of secondhand
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shopping across all generations. In a survey of 1,000 consumers 81% of baby
boomers participated in resale in 2021, up from just 39% in 2019.
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Refurbished electronics have also gained popularity because of the shortage
of new goods.
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Unknown: When we get a refurbished product, we get really good recoveries
back from it, so probably 80% to 100% of recoveries depending upon the
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seasonality in the market. But right now the market is very strong because
of the supply shortages on the forward side.
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Katie Schoolov: Refurbished consumer electronics like noise-cancelling
headphones or HP laptops are in high demand, but also high-end refurbished
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items like the machines used to make microchips.
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Unknown: We've seen Fortune 500 companies access used equipment on our
marketplace because the time to ship is shorter in the circular economy
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then originating a newly manufactured good, putting it on a vessel,
transporting it across the ocean, to a port that's likely backlogged for
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six to eight months.
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Katie Schoolov: And as the secondary market grows, many retailers are now
selling refurbished items directly. Amazon has entire sections of its site
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devoted to this. There's Warehouse Deals for used goods, Amazon Renewed for
refurbished items, Amazon Outlet for overstock, and a tongue-in-cheek daily
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deal site called Woot that sells a $10 bag of crap. BestBuy now has an
online outlet where it sells open-box appliances and TVs and HP has an
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outlet with refurbished computers and more.
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Unknown: We're going to remanufacture it and remarket it with an HP
warranty. Or we're going to sell it as-is to a certified contracted
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partner, who will then either re-manufacture it themselves and sell it with
their third-party warranty or part harvest it and and sell the parts.
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Katie Schoolov: The liquidation boom has spawned another trend, too.
Hundreds of bargain bin stores are popping up all over the country with
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names like Dirt Cheap and Treasure Hunt Liquidators, where dozens of
customers line up, sometimes even camping overnight to get first pick after
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weekly drop-offs of liquidation pallets. They dig through bins and bins of
returns, in search of trending items they can flip for a profit.
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Tony Sciarrotta: Stores like Big Lots, Bargain Hunt, Ollie's Bargain Outlet
etc. All of these stores and then eBay, and even Amazon has gotten into it.
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So they're selling the returns back to consumers because, again, 90% of the
time, nothing wrong with it.
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Katie Schoolov: Liquidity Services has its own take on the
direct-to-consumer trend. At the company's new AllSurplus Deals warehouse
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that opened in Phoenix in October, customers pick up items they've won in
online auctions that usually start at $5. This is especially helpful for
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liquidating bulky items like kayaks.
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But something like that is going to be very expensive to ship, no? Because
it's so big.
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Unknown: That's the beauty of our fulfillment center network. We can take
these items back directly from consumers, and then have consumers bid
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online and pickup at our warehouse.
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Katie Schoolov: Angrick plans to open a second AllSurplus Deals warehouse
in Dallas later this year.
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Unknown: The more people discover that hey, there's nothing inherently
wrong with this product. I trust the marketplace that sold it to me. I can
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save significant dollars. That's really benefiting all parties.
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