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#191533 - 10/08/08 07:22 PM Re: They're Not Jumping Out of Office Windows, Yet - But... [Re: rudywoofs]
Amelia Administrator Offline
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I'm seeing every day. The newly unemployed due to this crisis are out in droves applying everywhere. Just the other day at one of my stores (which happens to be a Plaid Pantry/76 station) a very nice looking man came in to ask about work and leave a resume. Even though he was in jeans and sport shirt, you could tell he wasn't your every day gas jock nor the usual type that would work convienence stores. I gave one of those raised eyebrow looks to the mgr and he said two words. Over qualified. Which means that he would never even get a chance because as soon as his industry regains strength, he would be gone.
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#191536 - 10/08/08 07:32 PM Re: They're Not Jumping Out of Office Windows, Yet - But... [Re: Amelia]
Redwood Online   content
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Amelia. In this type of work ... do you actually have most employees staying at their jobs for long periods of time? I just wonder if this reliable, intelligent worker ... might be a real asset for perhaps longer than many of the fly by night immature workers that you might perhaps get many times.
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#191543 - 10/08/08 07:55 PM Re: They're Not Jumping Out of Office Windows, Yet - But... [Re: Redwood]
Shane Offline
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I don't hire people that ask for more money than what I am going to pay either. A lot of people will come on board for less money but leave as soon as they find a job willing to pay more.
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#191556 - 10/08/08 10:12 PM Re: They're Not Jumping Out of Office Windows, Yet - But... [Re: Redwood]
rudywoofs Offline
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Registered: 07/16/05
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Originally Posted By: Redwood
Amelia. In this type of work ... do you actually have most employees staying at their jobs for long periods of time? I just wonder if this reliable, intelligent worker ... might be a real asset for perhaps longer than many of the fly by night immature workers that you might perhaps get many times.


exactly...just because someone is over qualified doesn't automatically mean they will abandon their job when/if that "something better" comes along. Some people do have good work ethics and loyalty, y' know.
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#191893 - 10/10/08 02:19 AM Re: They're Not Jumping Out of Office Windows, Yet - But... [Re: rudywoofs]
Shane Offline
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OK, now I am down 26.26%. My Exxon Mobile stock really tanked today. Good thing it is only 8.5% of my portfolio.
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#192252 - 10/11/08 08:42 AM Re: They're Not Jumping Out of Office Windows, Yet - But... [Re: Shane]
Amelia Administrator Offline
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Quote:
My Exxon Mobile stock really tanked today


Exxon Mobile........tanked.......... ROFL
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" Do not love the world or anything in the world. If anyone loves the world, the love of the Father is not in him..."1 John 2:15-16

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#192284 - 10/11/08 03:40 PM Re: They're Not Jumping Out of Office Windows, Yet - But... [Re: Amelia]
fccool Online   content


Registered: 01/16/08
Posts: 885
Loc: Iowa
Google up "Level 3 assets" and read up on that, and that's when you will understand why stock market and financial corporate world is in a big doodoo right now, so are pension and retirement funds of many Americans.

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#192517 - 10/12/08 07:15 AM Re: They're Not Jumping Out of Office Windows, Yet - But... [Re: fccool]
Amelia Administrator Offline
Here Forever, by Request :)

Registered: 07/30/01
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Thanks fccool but I don't really want to be any more depressed than I already am. lol
_________________________
"Earth - insane asylum for the universe." - Maxine

" Do not love the world or anything in the world. If anyone loves the world, the love of the Father is not in him..."1 John 2:15-16

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#192529 - 10/12/08 07:59 AM Re: They're Not Jumping Out of Office Windows, Yet - But... [Re: Amelia]
Shane Offline
Administrator of Foro Adventista

Registered: 02/02/02
Posts: 17020
Loc: Rio Grande Valley, Texas
OK, let's cool it or I am going to jump out of my office window. Of course my office is in a single story building.
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#192533 - 10/12/08 08:21 AM Re: They're Not Jumping Out of Office Windows, Yet - But... [Re: Shane]
Amelia Administrator Offline
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OK, someone explain this to me. Read the article and then tell me that my money was all in my head. I am confused. I earned money by working. I am paid that money but some was taken out pretax and put into a 401k. My statement comes and alot of my money is gone. Now this article says that money really wasn't there to begin with. Say what? I had it and gave it to you to oversee. Now you say a bunch of it is gone. But since it really wasn't there, I really didn't lose it? If I had something tangeble, how can it now be non-tangeble? How can I have money one day and no money the next without it having gone somewhere or to someone?


Quote:
October 11, 2008

All that money you've lost _ where did it go?

By ERIC CARVIN
Associated Press Writer

Trillions in stock market value — gone. Trillions in retirement savings — gone. A huge chunk of the money you paid for your house, the money you're saving for college, the money your boss needs to make payroll — gone, gone, gone.

Whether you're a stock broker or Joe Six-pack, if you have a 401(k), a mutual fund or a college savings plan, tumbling stock markets and sagging home prices mean you've lost a whole lot of the money that was right there on your account statements just a few months ago.

But if you no longer have that money, who does? The fat cats on Wall Street? Some oil baron in Saudi Arabia? The government of China?

Or is it just — gone?

If you're looking to track down your missing money — figure out who has it now, maybe ask to have it back — you might be disappointed to learn that is was never really money in the first place.

Robert Shiller, an economist at Yale, puts it bluntly: The notion that you lose a pile of money whenever the stock market tanks is a "fallacy." He says the price of a stock has never been the same thing as money — it's simply the "best guess" of what the stock is worth.

"It's in people's minds," Shiller explains. "We're just recording a measure of what people think the stock market is worth. What the people who are willing to trade today — who are very, very few people — are actually trading at. So we're just extrapolating that and thinking, well, maybe that's what everyone thinks it's worth."

Shiller uses the example of an appraiser who values a house at $350,000, a week after saying it was worth $400,000.

"In a sense, $50,000 just disappeared when he said that," he said. "But it's all in the mind."

Though something, of course, is disappearing as markets and real estate values tumble. Even if a share of stock you own isn't a wad of bills in your wallet, even if the value of your home isn't something you can redeem at will, surely you can lose potential money — that is, the money that would be yours to spend if you sold your house or emptied out your mutual funds right now.

And if you're a few months away from retirement, or hoping to sell your house and buy a smaller one to help pay for your kid's college tuition, this "potential money" is something you're counting on to get by. For people who need cash and need it now, this is as real as money gets, whether or not it meets the technical definition of the word.

Still, you run into trouble when you think of that potential money as being the same thing as the cash in your purse or your checking account.

"That's a big mistake," says Dale Jorgenson, an economics professor at Harvard.

There's a key distinction here: While the money in your pocket is unlikely to just vanish into thin air, the money you could have had, if only you'd sold your house or drained your stock-heavy mutual funds a year ago, most certainly can.

"You can't enjoy the benefits of your 401(k) if it's disappeared," Jorgenson explains. "If you had it all in financial stocks and they've all gone down by 80 percent — sorry! That is a permanent loss because those folks aren't coming back. We're gonna have a huge shrinkage in the financial sector."

There was a time when nobody had to wonder what happened to the money they used to have. Until paper money was developed in China around the ninth century, money was something solid that had actual value — like a gold coin that was worth whatever that amount of gold was worth, according to Douglas Mudd, curator of the American Numismatic Association's Money Museum in Denver.

Back then, if the money you once had was suddenly gone, there was a simple reason — you spent it, someone stole it, you dropped it in a field somewhere, or maybe a tornado or some other disaster struck wherever you last put it down.

But these days, a lot of things that have monetary value can't be held in your hand.

If you choose, you can pour most of your money into stocks and track their value in real time on a computer screen, confident that you'll get good money for them when you decide to sell. And you won't be alone — staring at millions of computer screens are other investors who share your confidence that the value of their portfolios will hold up.

But that collective confidence, Jorgenson says, is gone. And when confidence is drained out of a financial system, a lot of investors will decide to sell at any price, and a big chunk of that money you thought your investments were worth simply goes away.

If you once thought your investment portfolio was as good as a suitcase full of twenties, you might suddenly suspect that it's not.

In the process, of course, you're losing wealth. But does that mean someone else must be gaining it? Does the world have some fixed amount of wealth that shifts between people, nations and institutions with the ebb and flow of the economy?

Jorgenson says no — the amount of wealth in the world "simply decreases in a situation like this." And he cautions against assuming that your investment losses mean a gain for someone else — like wealthy stock speculators who try to make money by betting that the market will drop.

"Those folks in general have been losing their shirts at a prodigious rate," he said. "They took a big risk and now they're suffering from the consequences."

"Of course, they had a great life, as long as it lasted."
_________________________
"Earth - insane asylum for the universe." - Maxine

" Do not love the world or anything in the world. If anyone loves the world, the love of the Father is not in him..."1 John 2:15-16

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