Which a person can see as a so-called improving economy at government\taxpayer expense.
As I said to another, I will take the word from Forbes.
Show me sources that show the economy is at taxpayer expense. Thanks in advance.
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Which a person can see as a so-called improving economy at government\taxpayer expense.
Which corporations? The strongest have always survived, and they do so by not spending and saving, what you mention.Disagree. Corporations are (mostly) profitable, and have been for several years. They are sitting on cash. Their balance sheets are strong. The run-up in the stock market is real, though aided by the Fed. The trick will be for the Fed to figure out the proper timing to ease themselves out of the picture.
Nope. We're simply seeing the heave in death spasm.If Obama's policies are so great why is this the slowest recovery ever?
http://blog.heritage.org/2012/11/04/chart-of-the-week-slowest-economic-recovery-since-the-1960s/
Why is his job creation running about 1/3 the monthly job creation rate during Reagan's recovery?
The Fed's quantitative easing is helping the stock market, for sure. Investors are getting nearly nothing for returns in interest rates causing them to buy stocks.
But corporate balance sheets are strong. Profit margins are strong. Earnings are strong. I expect we will see the S&P 500 at 1800 by the end of the year and it will keep going for several years. I wouldn't be surprised to see the Dow at 20,000 in the next five years.
I agree the balloon will burst, they always do, but I don't think it will happen for several years.
If that were true the market would be falling. The market is a lead indicator, not a lagging one. Printing money would mean rising inflation and that is not happening. [Econimica 101]
Sources please.
As I said to another, I will take the word from Forbes.
Show me sources that show the economy is at taxpayer expense. Thanks in advance.
My wife's a Realtor, you couldn't be more wrong about the recovery. Banks and investors are gobbling properties up and are sitting on them.
Quantitative Easing has artificially inflated the stock market. You can disagree, but I have a friend who is a broker and even agrees this is quite temporary.
Which corporations? The strongest have always survived, and they do so by not spending and saving, what you mention.
The stock market runup is smoke and mirrors.
CBT thoroughly spanked—again—by the Rev.http://theeconomiccollapseblog.com/...e-real-reason-why-the-stock-market-is-soaring
http://www.moneynews.com/StreetTalk/Peck-Fed-Money-Printing-stock/2013/03/10/id/494003
Sorry I did not realize you were so uninformed this is common knowledge:
http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs...e-labor-force/2011/12/02/gIQAfJLuKO_blog.html
http://www.usatoday.com/story/money/business/2013/04/07/march-labor-force-participation/2057887/
http://www.heritage.org/research/commentary/2012/10/welfare-is-at-an-all-time-high
Sorry Rev. Not credible. Not one business source in your sources. Still I will take the word of Forbes over political pieces when we are talking economics.
Like the unemployment numbers, these are skewed. They don't take into consideration who is buying them, short sales, etc. It only tells half the story, and comparing the market to 3 years ago is not the best indicator either.Home sales close in on three-and-a-half year high
http://www.reuters.com/article/2013/05/22/us-usa-economy-housing-idUSBRE94F0J120130522
The National Association of Realtors said on Wednesday existing home sales advanced 0.6 percent to an annual rate of 4.97 million units, the highest level since November 2009. The data underscored the housing market's improving fortunes as it starts to regain its lost glory. Resales were 9.7 percent higher than the same period last year.
Maybe in the parts of the country, but here in Colorado, demand for homes far outstrips the supply. Sure investors buy property...but so do lots of owner-occupiers.My wife's a Realtor, you couldn't be more wrong about the recovery. Banks and investors are gobbling properties up and are sitting on them. Foreclosures and short sales are still quite high.
The unemployment numbers are only aided by those falling off the record. No real improvement there, and when a job is had, it is going to be under 30 hours to fit into Obamacare.
Ask yourself why that is after the copious amounts of homes foreclosed and short sales. How did this market miraculously turn around like that in 24 months? Banks are buying up homes in huge packages before released to the consumer.Maybe in the parts of the country, but here in Colorado, demand for homes far outstrips the supply. Sure investors buy property...but so do lots of owner-occupiers.
Dumbest thing I've read. Your buddy Clinton started the mess in '99, but I guess liberals only like to go back to when Bush took office. Let's also forget he was also set to run a surplus until democrats took over congress. Inconvenient truths.Check again. The recovery in employment has been slow, but that speaks to the depth of the problem created under Republican policies. The Obamacare comment is just FNC talking point.
The only reason why there is any job growth at all is because the conservative states are carrying the rest of the country.
http://news.investors.com/052313-657271-red-states-beat-blue-states-on-economy-jobs.htm
Like the unemployment numbers, these are skewed. They don't take into consideration who is buying them, short sales, etc. It only tells half the story, and comparing the market to 3 years ago is not the best indicator either.
No, but they have been tearing down old ones and selling the land dirt cheap to developers. This has happened a couple times a few streets down from me in the last year.Well, banks are not buying new homes or foreclosing on them.
New home sales climb in April
New home sales climbed strongly in April, an indication that a long-awaited building market comeback is strengthening. Sales of newly built, single-family homes rose 2.3% above the prior month and were 29% above the same period last year. New homes sold at a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 454,000 units, the Commerce Department reported.
http://www.latimes.com/business/money/la-fi-mo-new-home-sales-20130523,0,1660270.story