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https://www.macrotrends.net/2577/sp-...earnings-chart |
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14% of companies had 401(k) plans for their employees My reality and my retirement are a 401 k selfunded a union aka state retirement and a Military one... haters got to hate . Posted from my iPhone/Mobile device |
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Overvaluation Corporate debt bubble about to burst like the private mortgage bubble did Etc It’s really hard to take a look at what the market has done the past 4 years and say there wasn’t an inflated nature to it. There was nothing gradual about the journey to the level we just crashed from Posted from my iPhone/Mobile device |
After Blowing $4.5 Trillion on Share Buybacks, Airlines, Boeing, Many Other Culprits Want Taxpayer & Fed Bailouts of their Shareholders
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Wait for the cruise ship industry to ask for a bailout. You know... the ones who’s ships are all registered in foreign ports to evade taxes
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the crash had little to do with where we were, or how we got there. we got hit with an outside force that no one predicted. I live in CT, a state that has been a 40 year experiment in pure, unchecked liberalism. The result? One of the richest states in the nation has unfunded debt equal to four times annual revenue, and people are fleeing. Posted from my iPhone/Mobile device |
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But I'm surprised you're picking "this market was stable as hell" as the hill to die on here... |
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Pipeline stocks. I’m not an expert but I’m no dummy either. Trump is touting that we are buying up any excess oil and filling the strategic oil reserves which I believe can hold 300 million more barrels. With the war powers enacted l believe he may put tariffs on imported Saudi oil to prop up shale producers or even throw up an embargo. Do your own due diligence of course. Posted from my iPhone/Mobile device |
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by almost any measure. i’m not dying in any hill, just stating what the data and most experts were saying. no market can survive people not being able to spend money. consumer spending is a key. i don’t see this drop as any indication of economic weakness. markets were up, companies making solid profits and growing, unemployment at historic lows, low inflation, gdp increasing, energy independence, jobs numbers crushing expectations, wages rising, where were the red flags? I agree on trumps personal style. Posted from my iPhone/Mobile device |
Heres a question for you market guys
How is a 1000 or 1200 dollar 1 time check going to help anyone realistically. Or is this just to help the markets . A 1000 bucks barely covers 1 months rent or 500 a car payment Clearly something is better than nothing But wouldnt frezzing interest and loan payment on mortages, cars, rent with out penalties help more Americans By having those payments added to the end of their loans Posted from my iPhone/Mobile device |
Too bad everyone wasn't as smart as these 2. FYI Burr voted previously against a ban on insider trading. He also is Eben's 2nd cousin.
WASHINGTON (AP) — Senate Intelligence Committee Chairman Richard Burr, R-N.C., sold as much as $1.7 million in stocks just before the market dropped in February amid fears about the coronavirus epidemic. Senate records show that Burr and his wife sold between roughly $600,000 and $1.7 million in more than 30 separate transactions in late January and mid-February, just before the market began to fall and as government health officials began to issue stark warnings about the effects of the virus. Several of the stocks were in companies that own hotels. The stock sales were first reported by ProPublica and The Center for Responsive Politics. Most of them came on Feb. 13, just before Burr made a speech in Washington, D.C., in which he predicted severe consequences from the virus, including closed schools and cutbacks in company travel, according to audio obtained by National Public Radio and released Thursday. Burr told the small North Carolina State Society audience that the virus was “much more aggressive in its transmission than anything that we have seen in recent history” and “probably more akin to the 1918 pandemic." Burr’s remarks were much more dire than remarks he had made publicly, and came as President Donald Trump was still downplaying the severity of the virus. There is no indication that Burr had any inside information as he sold the stocks and issued the private warnings. The intelligence panel did not have any briefings on the pandemic the week when most of the stocks were sold, according to a person familiar with the matter. The person declined to be identified to discuss confidential committee activity. Burr said on Twitter Thursday that Americans were already being warned about the effects of the virus when he made the speech to the North Carolina State Society. “The message I shared with my constituents is the one public health officials urged all of us to heed as coronavirus spread increased,” Burr wrote. “Be prepared.” Burr sent out the tweets before reports of his stock sales. A spokesperson for the senator said in a statement that Burr “has been deeply concerned by the steep and sudden toll this pandemic is taking on our economy” and supports congressional efforts to help the economy. The spokesperson declined to be identified in order to share the senator’s thinking. The North Carolina senator was not the only lawmaker to sell of stocks just before the steep decline due to the global pandemic. Georgia Sen. Kelly Loeffler, a new senator who is up for re-election this year, sold off hundreds of thousands of dollars worth of stock in late January, as senators began to get briefings on the virus, also according to Senate records. In the weeks that followed, Loeffler urged her constituents to have faith in the Trump administration's efforts to prepare the nation. “@realDonaldTrump & his administration are doing a great job working to keep Americans healthy & safe,” Loeffler tweeted Feb. 27. The Daily Beast first reported that Loeffler dropped the stock in late January. The senator is married to Jeffrey Sprecher, the chairman and CEO of Intercontinental Exchange, which owns the New York Stock Exchange. |
Senate Intelligence Chairman Richard Burr (R-N.C.) dumped between $582,029 and $1.56 million of his stocks on Feb. 13, days after writing a Fox News op-ed that said the U.S. is "better prepared than ever before" to face public health threats like the coronavirus, according to ProPublica.
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This seems like a smart move by this man. I would guess that most here would have done the same. This is how money is managed.
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Three other senators also sold major holdings around the time Mr. Burr did, according to the disclosure records: Dianne Feinstein, Democrat of California, who is also a member of the Intelligence Committee; James M. Inhofe, Republican of Oklahoma; and Kelly Loeffler, Republican of Georgia.
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of people spend that extra money, it helps the small businesses recover from the crushing lack of rev he thats pulverizing them now. shortens the length of time it takes for businesses to recover lost revenue, which means less layoffs, and that’s a key thing. The $1,000 doesn’t change anyone’s life. but it will help keep people employed as that money is spent and re spent. Posted from my iPhone/Mobile device |
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there’s also a lot more to the aid than 1,000 checks to individuals. All kinds of loans and grants to small business. that will also help. minimizing unemployment is a high priority here, and helping businesses with a short term cash crunch, will keep unemployment down. Posted from my iPhone/Mobile device |
i think senators who used non-public information to dump their portfolios, have some serious explaining to do.
If they relied on non public information... Posted from my iPhone/Mobile device |
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if it walks like a duck its a duck ... |
This is the 1-month anniversary of the S&P record high.
Quite a month, eh? |
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impacted the most are given a chance to recover. People claw their way back all the time. it’s not easy or quick, but it happens. my hope is that the relief package provides loans to banks to allow them to be more forgiving than usual. Saw that Amazon is hiring 100,000 new employees right away, that’s big. like you, i’m lucky enough to not be too impacted, i can work from home. I wish everyone was as secure. Posted from my iPhone/Mobile device |
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people stay in their homes. i had neighbors with a nice house who struggled , they worked with the bank for over a year. not everything was mandated by law, there was a lot of back and forth negotiating. it’s much cheaper and easier for banks to keep existing homeowners in their homes, then to try to foreclose and sell. Posted from my iPhone/Mobile device |
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