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 US stock discussion v3, Double Bottom coming?

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sulifeisgreat
post Aug 19 2011, 12:10 PM

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argument is healthy for the thread biggrin.gif
if here is all yes man - then no difference from bolehland political situation few years ago

One year ago, President Obama signed the Dodd-Frank Act into law, setting the U.S. on a collision course with economic mediocrity and a prolonged period of high unemployment.

Since the passage of Dodd-Frank, credit conditions continue to be tight, the securitization market is still frozen and massive regulatory overreach is making the cost of doing business at every level in the supply chain more expensive for main street businesses.

Not only that, but rather than ending "too big to fail," Dodd-Frank has codified it.

Congressional Democrats gave financial regulators appointed by the Obama administration full discretion to implement the law as they saw fit without first considering the broader economic implications of their scorched-earth approach to regulatory reform.

And implement is exactly what they have done — proposing more than 100 new regulations that not only reach banks, but also impact a whole host of unsuspecting entities, ranging from small-business owners and farmers to community banks, pension plans and manufacturers.

Blindsided by the cumulative cost of this albatross of new regulation, Main Street businesses have decided to put their hiring and investment decisions on hold. Even more alarming, a number of these businesses have said that if certain proposed regulations become final in their current form, then they will be forced to leave the markets altogether to avoid the regulatory costs imposed by Dodd-Frank.

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sulifeisgreat
post Aug 20 2011, 12:22 AM

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the whole world knows that us co. r sitting on trillions of cash & even obama is asking y r they not using it nod.gif
also y has demand been mediocre? irregardless, if anyone wanna blame Bush for all those things during his 8 yr presidency cool2.gif
then likewise, obama needs to be blame for things tat happens under his watch, coz he's an adult & no need teleprompters doh.gif

http://pajamasmedia.com/blog/business-owne...re-regulations/

As the president doubles down on regulation — from labor, to carbon, to health care “reform” — business owners are crying foul. Regulation and the costs associated with it are all but incalculable, and are killing the very job creation on which President Barack Obama says he is focused “like a laser.”

See CKE Restaurants: according to a release from the House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform’s “American Job Creators” initiative, CKE owns or franchises 3,182 restaurants under the Carl’s Jr. and Hardee’s brand names nationwide, employing more than 70,000. Each new restaurant generates roughly 25 new jobs and pumps more than $1 million into the surrounding community.

According to the release, to comply with just one of the hundreds of new regulations in the health insurance law CKE will be forced to spend approximately $1.5 million to replace all restaurant menus. That equals 17 percent of what the company invested in new restaurants in 2010.

Those are not the committee’s numbers: those numbers were provided by CKE’s CEO Andy Puzder. In a video sent out with the release, Pudzer said unknowns — in particular, health care — are stifling job growth:

You generally try to come up with a five-year business plan. You have to know what your expenses are going to be and generally know what your revenue will be. People right now are very worried about taxes because the president keeps talking about raising taxes so it’s very difficult to model that in the forecast. The uncertainty in the businesses community arises from a number of factors: taxes, energy and primarily health care.

Health care is probably the most significant unknown at the moment. People are unsure about how much it will impact their business, but they will know it will be significant and it will be negative. It’s very hard to model the cost because the bill is so complex. The range [CKE’s economic forecasters] gave us on our health care costs increasing was between $7.3 and $35.1 million. We spent about $9 million last year building new restaurants. That would be totally wiped out.

Puzder said he was given a best guess of $18 million on increased health care costs, double what they spent creating new restaurants and new jobs last year.

Puzder recently testified in front of the Oversight Health Care Subcommittee that those increased costs would force them to stop building new restaurants and possibly let people go:

We use our revenue to pay our bills and expenses, to pay down our debt, and we reinvest what is left in our business. New unit construction will cease if we have to allocate the monies for that construction to the [president’s health insurance law], and building new restaurants is how we create jobs.

Puzder said they’d also have to look at automation within their stores:

We will automate positions such as the cashier. Right now they have those ordering kiosks like the ATM. We haven’t used those because we like the personal touch and they are a little expensive, but once you implement this health care bill, I think those kiosks are going to become much more desirable. So I will be reducing labor force and also automating positions.

QUOTE(danmooncake @ Aug 19 2011, 06:48 PM)
I thought that passage was familiar.. it was BS political commentary written by Rep. Scott Garrett published by IBD.
He's knows nothing about Dodd-Frank implementation. The US banks already got around to it. I work in the call center that process US credit requests, already know that the US banks today are flushed with cash and pretty liquid. It has nothing with small businesses not able to get loan. It just that the demand been mediocre..  nod.gif
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sulifeisgreat
post Aug 27 2011, 12:02 AM

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I not a daytrader but we need al gore Attached Image I mean someone needs to decipher those algo
here u guys no like dog jones, here is s&p instead & look at the bull bear ratio, they r gonna intersect soon wink.gif
if s&p hits 1240 or 1100, then can enter. otherwise its ranging neither here nor there tongue.gif
Attached Image

http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/44288099/ns/bu...ks_and_economy/

The Federal Reserve has done all it can for now to get the U.S. economy back on track. Now it's time to simply wait for it to heal.

But, in a narrow sense, the Fed's policies so far have worked: the U.S. economy is awash in cash.

The problem now is that money from the Fed's pump-priming isn't flowing fast enough through the system. Business managers, faced with uncertainty about the rising prospect of another recession, are hoarding cash.

http://blogs.telegraph.co.uk/news/geraldwa...l_end_in_tears/

The most powerful nation on earth is confronting its worst economic crisis under the leadership of its most extremely liberal politician, who has virtually no experience of federal politics.

BUT ITS TRULY AN OPPORTUNITY, since int rate can be kept so low for 2 years. everyone knows wat happen when int rate goes up icon_idea.gif

This post has been edited by sulifeisgreat: Aug 27 2011, 05:39 AM

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