Brewha
3 years ago
Not to put too fine a point on it, but this tread - titled to hang the US economy problems on Biden is bull shit.

No one is assailing a particular action by the administration - that would be fair. But posting the typical cyclic layoffs of tech companies as evidence we need a different president is the kind of crap that only sell to people that have a them or us mentality towards politics.
DrMaddVibe
3 years ago

Not to put too fine a point on it, but this tread - titled to hang the US economy problems on Biden is bull shit.

No one is assailing a particular action by the administration - that would be fair. But posting the typical cyclic layoffs of tech companies as evidence we need a different president is the kind of crap that only sell to people that have a them or us mentality towards politics.

Brewha wrote:




So you're butthurt it's your voting issue and the headlines make you cry? Oh how Lefty railed on anyone with a R next to their name.

Thanks for making my day.

Meanwhile....Brandon is doing his best Kenyan King impression!

https://www.zerohedge.com/personal-finance/wtf-chart-day-jobless-claims-finally-rise-layoffs-soar-fastest-pace-lehman [/i]

Oh those pesky graphs...the graphs...
Abrignac
3 years ago

US job openings take a dip in Jan.


WASHINGTON — U.S. employers posted 10.8 million job openings in January, indicating the American job market continues to run too hot for the inflation fighters at the Federal Reserve.

Job openings fell from 11.2 million in December but remained high by historical standards, the Labor Department reported Wednesday. Employers also hired more workers in January. But layoffs rose.

For 20 consecutive months, employers have posted at least 10 million openings — a level never reached before 2021 in Labor Department data going back to 2000. The number of openings in January exceeded what economists had forecast and translates to about two vacancies for every unemployed American.

rfenst wrote:




Ahh the tempest in the teapot. With 2 vacancies per unemployed person, why in the fucq is unemployment being paid for people to sit on their arse?
RayR
3 years ago
Haven't we been assailing particular actions by the administration since the beginning?
Brewha never saw them I guess. 😣
HockeyDad
3 years ago
New York
CNN

General Motors said in January it would save $2 billion without planning any layoffs. But on Thursday it said it was looking for workers to leave voluntarily.

In a regulatory filing, the automaker said it was looking to save costs through attrition and a voluntary separation program in which eligible employees would get a lump sum payment and other severance based on how long they worked at the company. The buyouts would cost the company $1.5 billion before taxes this year.

The voluntary separation program will be offered to all US salaried employees with at least five years of service and global executives that have been with the company for at least two years, a GM spokesperson told CNN. In a statement, the company said that employees are “strongly encouraged to consider” the program.

“By permanently bringing down structured costs, we can improve vehicle profitability and remain nimble in an increasingly competitive market,” a GM spokesperson said in a statement.

The news follows the elimination of hundreds of salaried worker jobs earlier this month. A person familiar with the plans told CNN that those job cuts would affect a few hundred white-collar employees globally.
Brewha
3 years ago

So you're butthurt it's your voting issue and the headlines make you cry? Oh how Lefty railed on anyone with a R next to their name.

Thanks for making my day.

Meanwhile....Brandon is doing his best Kenyan King impression!

https://www.zerohedge.com/personal-finance/wtf-chart-day-jobless-claims-finally-rise-layoffs-soar-fastest-pace-lehman [/i]

Oh those pesky graphs...the graphs...

DrMaddVibe wrote:


Actually, I think butthurt is your specialty.

Which is why you always have an emotional based opinion response.
Normally someone elses response.
Brewha
3 years ago

New York
CNN

General Motors said in January it would save $2 billion without planning any layoffs. But on Thursday it said it was looking for workers to leave voluntarily.

In a regulatory filing, the automaker said it was looking to save costs through attrition and a voluntary separation program in which eligible employees would get a lump sum payment and other severance based on how long they worked at the company. The buyouts would cost the company $1.5 billion before taxes this year.

The voluntary separation program will be offered to all US salaried employees with at least five years of service and global executives that have been with the company for at least two years, a GM spokesperson told CNN. In a statement, the company said that employees are “strongly encouraged to consider” the program.

“By permanently bringing down structured costs, we can improve vehicle profitability and remain nimble in an increasingly competitive market,” a GM spokesperson said in a statement.

The news follows the elimination of hundreds of salaried worker jobs earlier this month. A person familiar with the plans told CNN that those job cuts would affect a few hundred white-collar employees globally.

HockeyDad wrote:



That's cause of Tesla - not Biden...
DrMaddVibe
3 years ago

Actually, I think butthurt is your specialty.

Which is why you always have an emotional based opinion response.
Normally someone elses response.

Brewha wrote:




You really are dumber than a bag of hammers.


Emotional?

You don't rate that. If you think for one second I'd piss on you if you were on fire...not even if you had a full gas can under each arm.
Brewha
3 years ago

You really are dumber than a bag of hammers.


Emotional?

You don't rate that. If you think for one second I'd piss on you if you were on fire...not even if you had a full gas can under each arm.

DrMaddVibe wrote:


So….you’re trying to steer it back to a dispassionate debate then?

:-k
drglnc
3 years ago

New York
CNN

General Motors said in January it would save $2 billion without planning any layoffs. But on Thursday it said it was looking for workers to leave voluntarily.

In a regulatory filing, the automaker said it was looking to save costs through attrition and a voluntary separation program in which eligible employees would get a lump sum payment and other severance based on how long they worked at the company. The buyouts would cost the company $1.5 billion before taxes this year.

The voluntary separation program will be offered to all US salaried employees with at least five years of service and global executives that have been with the company for at least two years, a GM spokesperson told CNN. In a statement, the company said that employees are “strongly encouraged to consider” the program.

By permanently bringing down structured costs, we can improve vehicle profitability and remain nimble in an increasingly competitive market,” a GM spokesperson said in a statement.

The news follows the elimination of hundreds of salaried worker jobs earlier this month. A person familiar with the plans told CNN that those job cuts would affect a few hundred white-collar employees globally.

HockeyDad wrote:



Capitalism, working as intended...

rfenst
3 years ago

Ahh the tempest in the teapot. With 2 vacancies per unemployed person, why in the fucq is unemployment being paid for people to sit on their arse?

Abrignac wrote:




U.S. Economy Added 311,000 Jobs in February
Recent figures point to acceleration with firming inflation and higher consumer spending


WSJ

U.S. hiring grew solidly but cooled some in February as employers added 311,000 jobs, while unemployment rose to 3.6%

Other recent figures point to a buoyant economy. Consumer spending jumped in January, and inflation firmed. Business activity picked up in February.

A hot job market has emerged as one of the biggest economic surprises among many twists since the Covid-19 pandemic hit three years ago. With the Federal Reserve aggressively raising interest rates to tame inflation, many economists had expected job gains would cool or even turn into losses by now.

“The labor market’s definitely been stronger at this point than we would have thought maybe six months ago,” said Veronica Clark, economist at Citigroup.

Large parts of the economy—including restaurants, hospitals and nursing homes—are driving the growth. Those service providers were hit hardest by social-distancing measures at the onset of the pandemic. Now, nearly three years later, they are hiring at a rapid clip as they find it easier to recruit and fill openings.

The new jobs are more than offsetting cuts announced by huge employers such as Google parent Alphabet Inc., Amazon.com Inc. and Walt Disney Co.

There are signs that strong hiring could continue. Employers had 10.8 million open jobs in January, down slightly from 11.2 million in December. The totals are nearly double the number of unemployed people seeking work, and still far above prepandemic levels.

Staffing levels at Joe’s Real BBQ in Gilbert, Ariz. are up from a pandemic low in 2021, but the restaurant could still use more employees. That would help ease the workload for current employees, particularly on busy weekend days such as Super Bowl Sunday, when customers flooded in for St. Louis ribs, operating partner Tad Peelen said.

“We still feel the pinch,” he said. “If we had those 20 folks that I would love to hire, it would have felt a little easier.”

To help attract workers, the company has raised average wages to about $21 an hour from roughly $17 in early 2020 before the pandemic hit, Mr. Peelen said.

Broadly, wage gains have shown signs of cooling but remain well above their prepandemic pace.

Elevated wage growth is “a sign that the economy is still overheating and a real challenge for the Fed,” said Beth Ann Bovino, economist at S&P Global Ratings. “The concern is that when we see wage gains climb that high, that means that businesses then need to raise the price of their products.”

The Fed has been trying to slow investment, spending and hiring to combat inflation by raising interest rates. After holding the benchmark federal-funds rate near zero through much of the pandemic, officials lifted the rate more over the past 12 months than any time since the early 1980s, most recently to a range between 4.5% and 4.75% last month.

The economy’s recent pickup will delay Fed officials’ deliberations about when to pause rate increases, with officials and investors closely watching jobs and inflation figures. Investors are looking for clues about whether the Fed will raise rates by a quarter-percentage point, as it did last month, or a half-point, as it did in December. The next Fed rate policy meeting is March 21-22.

So far, companies in many industries—including housing and autos—have continued to hire despite higher interest rates.

Chris Ashcraft, owner of four Express Employment Professionals staffing offices in Alabama, Georgia and Florida, said auto companies including car manufacturers have a backlog of orders they are trying to fill as they recover from supply-chain issues. That is helping support their demand for workers, he said.

Mr. Ashcraft is trying to find workers for a range of companies including shipbuilders, electrical suppliers and steel mills.

“We haven’t heard anything about anybody laying people off,” he said.

Though recruiting for certain positions such as welders and machinists is difficult, more workers are seeking jobs now than earlier in the pandemic, he added.

At the start of this year, the share of workers ages 25 to 54 who are employed or seeking a job was just below February 2020 levels. Women have been helping propel the recent labor-force recovery as pandemic disruptions including virtual schooling and daycare closures fade.

Stronger rates of labor-force participation could help companies fill open jobs and counter fast-rising wages, better aligning the labor market with the Fed’s goal of lowering inflation.





(New jobs must be in the same local as the unemployed worker. (think Silicon Valley layoffs) vs. open positions anywhere outside acceptable daily travel distance The unemployed worker has to have the skills for the job. Additionally, there will always be some level of unemployment, even during an excellent economy all the way around- while people switch jobs- especially for better wages, among other moving factors. Yes, there are people who game the system and collect benefits without intending to work again or who purposely take their time. They don't deserve unemployment, but with wages continuing o rise, hopefully some of them will get off their asses.)
MACS
3 years ago
Is it really "growth? Or are the places the gov't forced to close just opening back up... if they survived?

311,000 for 375 million people. Yeah. Whoooo... lookit us go. [sarcasm]
HockeyDad
3 years ago
New York
CNN

Silicon Valley Bank collapsed Friday morning after a stunning 48 hours in which its capital crisis set off fears of a meltdown across the banking industry.

Its failure marks the largest shutdown of a US bank since 2008, when Washington Mutual fell during the financial crisis.
DrMaddVibe
3 years ago

New York
CNN

Silicon Valley Bank collapsed Friday morning after a stunning 48 hours in which its capital crisis set off fears of a meltdown across the banking industry.

Its failure marks the largest shutdown of a US bank since 2008, when Washington Mutual fell during the financial crisis.

HockeyDad wrote:




It's only the 18th largest financial institution. Besides 2008 was a long time ago and Our congress enacted legislation that would never allow another meltdown to occur. Everything is coming up roses. Why look at Robert's story that he posted. Look at the biting sarcasm that Brewah posts with. You have it wrong mister. Repent, you financial heretic!
RayR
3 years ago
That MUMBLING BUMBLING Biden. What a dufus. While he's still bragging about his bad policies and pathetic record as POTUS, he's still trying to convince people why we need to hire those 87,000 new IRS Agents...[whisper] "they're going check on the accountants for the super wealthy...".
Hey Joe! Only a Boobus Americanus is going to believe that!

Biden Mumbles Through Jobs Report Speech, Says He Is “Surprised” Republicans Want to Stop 87,000 IRS Agents From Shaking Down Middle Class (VIDEO)

By Cristina Laila Mar. 10, 2023 11:30 am

https://www.thegatewaypundit.com/2023/03/biden-mumbles-through-jobs-report-speech-says-he-is-surprised-republicans-want-to-stop-87000-irs-agents-from-shaking-down-middle-class-video/ 

Seems old Yeller Dog Yellen got collared. She was tryin' but I don't think all her yelping is helping. We all know she has been lyin' for Biden.

Yellen doesn't deny that 90% of new IRS audits would affect those making under $400K

https://www.foxbusiness.com/politics/yellen-doesnt-deny-90-new-irs-audits-affect-those-making-under-400k 
Brewha
3 years ago

Look at the biting sarcasm that Brewah posts with.

DrMaddVibe wrote:




And I was starting to thing I was unappreciated….
HockeyDad
3 years ago
CNN

With the shocking failure of Silicon Valley Bank on Friday, I’m sure the lights are on late this weekend at the White House, Treasury, Fed and the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation.

SVB, the second largest US bank ever to go under, was hit by a garden-variety bank run accelerated by a high concentration of large uninsured deposits. Yes, there were failures of risk management and regulatory supervision. And there are likely some other banks whose balance sheets have been similarly weakened by the rapid increases in interest rates, which dramatically diminished the value of Treasuries and mortgage-backed securities. According to FDIC Chair Martin Gruenberg last week, banks have yet to recognize about $620 billion of losses in market value caused by rising interest rates.

Despite the panic over SVB’s collapse, this situation isn’t likely to morph into a broader banking crisis. Since the collapse of Lehman Brothers in 2008, the largest US banks have been forced by regulators to be much more resilient. They also rely far more heavily than SVB on retail depositors, who tend to have a greater share of their deposits covered by FDIC insurance and are less prone to run at the first sign of trouble.

Of more immediate concern is the potentially systemic impact this will have on the tech sector, which has already seen mass layoffs and investments shrivel up in recent months. Close to half of all listed US venture-backed tech and health care firms were SVB customers and many of these companies were racing to line up funds to make payroll in the aftermath of the collapse.

Given US strategic technology objectives and the broader implications for national security, the government should intervene if a significant portion of these tech firms need cash to survive.

It’s possible that may not be necessary — if most of the affected tech depositors have sufficient alternative sources of cash or can be quickly restructured in bankruptcy and continue to bring their innovations to market, then the government doesn’t need to intervene with taxpayer-funded support.

If, however, a large fraction cannot survive, then it is in the US government’s own interests to step in. It can do that in a number of different ways. The SVB catastrophe could, for example, serve as a catalyst for the government to establish a new domestic industrial development bank, as proposed by Senator Chris Coons, which could provide bridge loans to the tech industry. For some tech startups, the Small Business Administration could step in with emergency loans, as was done when Covid hit in March 2020. California and the federal government each have a Technology Modernization Fund that could potentially provide grants to keep specific types of research and development alive. But these approaches may be too slow. Many tech firms that lost access to their SVB deposits may be unable to keep the lights on for long.

There are already signs that the government is taking swift action. The FDIC, the government agency charged with SVB’s workout and insuring some of its deposits, has said that insured depositors would have access to their deposits by Monday, and that it would pay uninsured depositors an “advance dividend within the next week.”

But plenty more may need to be done. The tech sector is an engine of economic growth and a key element of US national security, especially given the rivalry between the US and China. If the government decides that it needs to help the tech sector through this mess, then it will need to act quickly.
RayR
3 years ago
You want to know something HD...I smell another Bush/Obama-type Bailout in the air. 🦨💩
DrMaddVibe
3 years ago

You want to know something HD...I smell another Bush/Obama-type Bailout in the air. 🦨💩

RayR wrote:




Of course you do.


https://www.zerohedge.com/markets/svb-latest-developments-live-blog-fdic-auction-failed-svb-assets-underway 


Would it be better if they just failed though? I mean...they ran that place like a 1960's era casino.

https://mishtalk.com/economics/expect-criminal-indictments-of-svb-top-executives-heres-why [/i]

But, hey those swell jobs numbers though...

https://www.cnbc.com/2023/03/11/silicon-valley-bank-employees-received-bonuses-hours-before-takeover.html [/i]
Users browsing this topic