Printer Friendly
The Free Library
5,677,147 articles and books
Member login
User name  
Password 
 
Join us Forgot password?

New Report Shows That US Sporting and Athletic Goods Manufacturing Industry Topped USD16,394,000,000.


DUBLIN, Ireland -- Research and Markets (http://www.researchandmarkets.com/reports/c50884) has announced the addition of "Sporting and Athletic Goods Manufacturing Industry in the U.S. and its Foreign Trade (1996-2008)" to their offering.

This industry report focuses upon the Sporting and Athletic Goods Manufacturing industry. This industry comprises establishments primarily engaged in manufacturing sporting and athletic goods (except apparel and footwear).

NAICS NAICS North American Industry Classification System  Hierarchy:

339920 - Sporting and Athletic Goods Manufacturing

33992 - Sporting and Athletic Goods Manufacturing

3399 - Other Miscellaneous Manufacturing

339 - Miscellaneous Manufacturing

31-33 - Manufacturing Sector

SIC:

3069 - Fabricated fab·ri·cate  
tr.v. fab·ri·cat·ed, fab·ri·cat·ing, fab·ri·cates
1. To make; create.

2. To construct by combining or assembling diverse, typically standardized parts:
 Rubber Products, NEC (NEC Corporation, Tokyo, www.nec.com, www.necus.com) An electronics conglomerate known in the U.S. for its monitors. In Japan, it had the lion's share of the PC market until the late 1990s (see PC 98).

NEC was founded in Tokyo in 1899 as Nippon Electric Company, Ltd.
 (wet suits)

3949 - Sporting and Athletic Goods, NEC

This industry report includes 137 pages of the latest market research information on this industry. This new release date contains data as current as January of 2007. In addition to the detailed explanations of the provided statistical data, there are 88 charts, 22 tables, and 12 graphs to effectively illustrate the content. Use this report as; an in-depth analysis of the industry, an industry reference guide, an aid for benchmarking and forecasting, and as a tool for uncovering new business opportunities. Please refer to the Table of Contents for more information. The report is considered as the most comprehensive research in the market.

Key Topics:

INTRODUCTION

INCOME STATEMENT

BALANCE SHEET

CAPITAL EXPENDITURE

LABOR AND COMPENSATION

ESTABLISHMENTS

IMPORT

EXPORT

INDUSTRY PLAYERS

LINKS

APPENDIX A

SALES & MARKETING

APPENDIX B

INDUSTRY STRUCTURE

APPENDIX C

FOREIGN TRADE AND US STATES STATISTICS

APPENDIX D

INDUSTRY'S 4-YEAR FINANCIAL STATEMENT

APPENDIX E

REPORT METHODOLOGY

SPORTING AND ATHLETIC GOODS MANUFACTURING INDUSTRY

The industry's revenue for the year 2005 was approximately $12,430,000,000. The gross profit was 37.72% at $4,688,596,000. There were 2,058 establishments in this industry that year. Thus, average contribution (or revenue) per establishment annually was $6,039,000.

The total import export value for the year 2005 was $8,315,335,000. The top 5 trading countries were: China, $4,019,226,000 (48.34%); Canada, $804,672,000 (9.68%); Taiwan, $493,559,000 (5.94%); Japan, $405,113,000 (4.87%); and United Kingdom, $308,671,000 (3.71%). Their combined total represents approximately 73% of all imports and exports.

The total importing value for the year 2005 was $6,139,442,000. The top 5 importing countries were: China, $3,988,524,000 (64.97%); Taiwan, $475,917,000 (7.75%); Canada, $282,401,000 (4.60%); Mexico, $186,783,000 (3.04%); and Thailand, $169,479,000 (2.76%). Their combined total represents approximately 83% of import from all countries.

The total exporting value for the year 2005 was $2,175,893,000. The top 5 exporting countries were: Canada, $522,271,000 (24.0%); United Kingdom, $287,910,000 (13.23%); Japan, $267,372,000 (12.29%); Australia, $103,497,000 (4.76%); and Netherlands, $93,778,000 (4.31%). Their combined total represents approximately 59% of export to all countries.

Adding the import and subtracting the export, the total U.S. consumption value of this industry for the year was $16,394,000,000.

SCOPE

Archery archery, sport of shooting with bow and arrow, an important military and hunting skill before the introduction of gunpowder. England's Charles II fostered archery as sport, establishing in 1673 the world's oldest continuous archery tournament, the Ancient Scorton  equipment manufacturing

Athletic goods (except ammunition, clothing, footwear, small arms small arms, firearms designed primarily to be carried and fired by one person and, generally, held in the hands, as distinguished from heavy arms, or artillery. Early Small Arms


The first small arms came into general use at the end of the 14th cent.
) manufacturing

Badminton badminton (băd`mĭntən), game played by volleying a shuttlecock (called a "bird")—a small, cork hemisphere to which feathers are attached—over a net. Light, gut-strung rackets are used.  equipment manufacturing

Bags, golf, manufacturing

Bags, punching, manufacturing

Bait, artificial, fishing, manufacturing

Balls, baseball, basketball, football, golf, tennis, pool, and bowling, manufacturing

Baseball equipment and supplies (except footwear, uniforms) manufacturing

Basketball equipment and supplies (except footwear, uniforms) manufacturing

Billiard bil·liard  
adj.
Of, relating to, or used in billiards.

n.
See carom.

Adj. 1. billiard - of or relating to billiards; "a billiard ball"; "a billiard cue"; "a billiard table"
 equipment and supplies manufacturing

Bobsleds manufacturing

Boomerangs manufacturing

Bowling pin machines, automatic, manufacturing

Bows, archery, manufacturing

Boxing equipment manufacturing

Caddy A plastic container that holds a CD or DVD disc for added protection. The bare disc is placed in the caddy, and the caddy is inserted into the drive. A caddy is not a jewel case. A jewel case protects the disc for transportation. A caddy protects the disc while reading and writing.  carts manufacturing

Carts, caddy, manufacturing

Clubs, sporting goods Noun 1. sporting goods - sports equipment sold as a commodity
commodity, trade good, good - articles of commerce

sports equipment - equipment needed to participate in a particular sport
 (e.g., golf, Indian), manufacturing

Croquet croquet (krōkā`), lawn game in which the players hit wooden balls with wooden mallets through a series of 9 or 10 wire arches, or wickets. The first player to hit the posts placed at each end of the field wins.  sets manufacturing

Dumbbells manufacturing

Exercise machines manufacturing

Fencing equipment (sporting goods) manufacturing

Fishing tackle and equipment (except lines, nets, seines) manufacturing

Flies, artificial fishing, manufacturing

Football equipment and supplies (except footwear, uniforms) manufacturing

Gloves, sport and athletic (e.g., baseball, boxing, racketball, handball handball

Any of a variety games in which a small rubber ball is struck against a wall with the hand or fist. It can be played in a three- or four-walled court or against a single wall by two or four players (in singles or doubles games, respectively).
), manufacturing

Golfing equipment (e.g., bags, balls, caddy carts, clubs, tees) manufacturing

Gymnasium and playground equipment, manufacturing

Helmets, athletic (except motorized mo·tor·ize  
tr.v. mo·tor·ized, mo·tor·iz·ing, mo·tor·iz·es
1. To equip with a motor.

2. To supply with motor-driven vehicles.

3. To provide with automobiles.
 vehicle crash helmets), manufacturing

Hockey equipment (except apparel) manufacturing

Hockey skates manufacturing

Hooks, fishing, manufacturing

Ice skates manufacturing

Jogging machines, manufacturing

Leather gloves, athletic, manufacturing

Protectors, sports (e.g., baseball, basketball, hockey), manufacturing

Reels, fishing, manufacturing

Rods and rod parts, fishing, manufacturing

Roller skates roller skates nplpatines mpl de rueda

roller skates roll nplpatins mpl à roulettes

roller skates roll npl
 manufacturing

Sailboards manufacturing

Scuba diving scuba diving

Swimming done underwater with a self-contained underwater-breathing apparatus (scuba), as opposed to skin diving, which requires only a snorkel, goggles, and flippers. Scuba gear was invented by Jacques-Yves Cousteau and Émile Gagnan in 1943.
 equipment manufacturing

Skateboards skateboards

mini surfboard supported on roller-skate wheels; 1960s craze enjoyed renaissance. [Am. Hist.: Sann, 151–152]

See : Fads
 manufacturing

Skates and parts, ice and roller, manufacturing

Skis and skiing equipment (except apparel) manufacturing

Snowshoes snowshoes, footgear enabling the wearer to walk on soft snow without sinking. A snowshoe consists of a light frame of tough wood or aluminum, roughly the shape of a large tennis racket, which is strung with caribou skin or other material and is attached to the shoe  manufacturing

Sporting goods (except ammunition, clothing, footwear, small arms) manufacturing

Squash equipment (except apparel) manufacturing

Sticks, sports (e.g., hockey, lacrosse lacrosse (ləkrôs`), ball and goal game usually played outdoors by two teams of 10 players each on a field 60 to 70 yd (54.86 to 64.01 m) wide by 110 yd (100.58 m) long. Two goals face each other 80 yd (73. ), manufacturing

Surfboards manufacturing

Swimming pools, above ground, manufacturing

Tackle, fishing (except line, nets, seines), manufacturing

Tennis goods (e.g., balls, frames, rackets rackets

Game for two or four players with ball and racket on a four-walled court. Rackets is played with a hard ball in a relatively large court (approximately 9 × 18 m), unlike the related games of squash and racquetball.
) manufacturing

Toboggans manufacturing

Track and field athletic equipment (except apparel, footwear) manufacturing

Wet suits manufacturing

SUMMARY

This industry report packs 10 years of data from hundreds of reliable government and private statistical resources. The data have been compared and verified to assure the highest research quality. We frequently contacted these agencies and private companies to acquire the latest information, most of which is unavailable to the general public. It is estimated that to gather and organize the same information into an easy-to-read format in each report, an individual researcher would spend at least a year's worth of effort. The challenge is, by the time this is accomplished, some data is most likely obsolete. Our business is dedicated to the research of U.S. industries and their associated foreign trades. We can meet that challenge easily as our databases are directly linked to these resources.

The U.S. manufacturing sector is expected to hit the monumental 5 trillion dollars net sales Net Sales

The amount a seller receives from the buyer after costs associated with the sale are deducted.

Notes:
This amount is calculated by subtracting the following items from gross sales: merchandise returned for credit, allowances for damaged or missing goods, freight
 in 2006. U.S. economists have projected another 5% to 7% growth in the year 2007. To stay ahead, this industry report is intended for you to analyze the specific U.S. industry in greater detail. Not only does the report provide you with information on domestic production, it also supplies you with an industry's import and export data. The report depicts what are the products of the industry and their respective contributions. You can compare these products with the industry's materials, parts and components list that is in the report. The foreign trade data includes 10-years of statistics, and it is projected into year 2008. Such trade data is also provided at the commodity level based on the HTS HTS Heights
HTS Harmonized Tariff System
HTS High Throughput Screening (biomolecular assay screening)
HTS High-Throughput Screening (Pharmaceutical Industry)
HTS Harmonized Tariff Schedule
 classification.

This industry report includes detail information on:

1. Industry's major players

2. Organizations that set standards for the industry

3. Government agencies that regulate and monitor policies related to the industry

4. Trade associations, including educational institutions

5. Trade publications

6. Trade shows and organizers

7. Sources of the information

Information includes the name of the company or organization, a description of the organization and how it is related to the industry, and a URL URL
 in full Uniform Resource Locator

Address of a resource on the Internet. The resource can be any type of file stored on a server, such as a Web page, a text file, a graphics file, or an application program.
 link to its website.

For more information visit http://www.researchandmarkets.com/reports/c50884
COPYRIGHT 2007 Business Wire
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2007, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

 Reader Opinion

Title:

Comment:



 

Article Details
Printer friendly Cite/link Email Feedback
Publication:Business Wire
Date:Feb 21, 2007
Words:1143
Previous Article:Regional Health Information Organizations (RHIOs), eHealth Initiative (EHI) Grants and Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ) Grants Are...
Next Article:New Report Focuses on the Key Points of Self-Regulation When It Comes To What First Triggers an Investigation To What to Do When Wrongdoing Is...



Related Articles
Sport Chalet sporting gear chain will take plunge into stock mart. (initial public offering) (Company Profile)
COMING SOON BIG 5 AND WALGREENS PLAN GRAND OPENINGS.(News)
K2 INC. MAKES A PITCH FOR RAWLINGS.(Business)
Gold medal finalists named. (Tip-Off).
Small City, big options.(Huntington, W. Va.)
EXPANSION OK'D FOR CAL LUTHERAN.(News)
Weekly profile.(THE LABJ STOCK INDEX: TRACKING 200 SELECTED LOS ANGELES COUNTY-BASED COMPANIES)(United Merchandising Corp.)(Brief Article)(Company...
Valley-area's largest health clubs: ranked by members in the greater San Fernando Valley.(HEALTH CARE)(Directory)(Illustration)
Athletic suppliers.(2007 FACILITIES AND EQUIPMENT BUYER'S GUIDE)(Buyers guide)
Market diary.(THE LABJ STOCK INDEX: TRACKING 200 SELECTED LOS ANGELES COUNTY-BASED COMPANIES)

Terms of use | Copyright © 2009 Farlex, Inc. | Feedback | For webmasters | Submit articles