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Add You - Gridlock - To Be Or Not to Be - Or Who Cares
Temporary Employment - How to Survive
Fresh out of college with my Liberal Arts degree, with a concentration in English, it is not surprising that I had trouble finding employment. I soon turned to a temporary placement agency and became a “temp.” I had 6 assignments in one year before I found a permanent position on my own. It can be tough being a temporary employee, but there are some tips that can help you survive it. The following tips come from my personal experience with one temp agency.Remember, you’re temporarydo not necessarily thrive during political gridlock. In fact, the study showed smaller companies actually thrive when there is no gridlock and the Congress and President work in harmony. The study, which analyzed ten stock indexes and periods of political gridlock from 1949 through 2004, found that, adjusting for inflation, annual returns in gridlock periods averaged about 6%. In periods of political harmony, annual returns averaged about 22%. For the smallest companies in the study, the difference was even more pronounced. During periods of gridlock, annual returns averaged about 4.7% Tell Me The Reasons Why I Should Believe You? The mid-term elections are over, the markets are back to their bullish self, and the sky is not falling.Have you ever heard the phrase, 'PREPONDERANCE OF PROOF'?I recently heard it to describe a situation where a person was backed up against a wall (legally speaking) and needed a way out of the mess.The legal guy came in and said, 'I feel we may win this case'. The defendant was furious with his lawyers. I want you to have an abundance, a 'preponderance of proof' so that we bury them in evidence. I want them to 'surrender' because of the unending proof we can give them!That real Wall Street extended its November rally earlier this week, carrying the Dow Jones industrial into new territory as investors anticipated a business-friendly outcome of the mid-term elections and bought stocks across the market. In Tuesday’s Congressional elections, the opposition Democratic Party regained control of both the House and Senate, leaving the legislature in Democratic hands and the presidency in Republican hands; with legislative gridlock the likely outcome. Stocks often rally on elections as Wall Street bets change will lead to an environment more favorable to business. The prevailing wisdom is that a split in power in Washington will create legislative gridlock, slowing down regulatory change. Some investors ran for cover Wednesday as stocks fell early in the day as the election results became known. Still, a pullback in stocks was to be expected after back-to-back sharp gains for the major indexes this week. Although professional investors are often viewed as being politically conservative, Wall Street likes what many voters hate: gridlock. The market likes to alleviate as many risks as possible, so a “non-activist” government is often seen as one less variable businesses must contend with. “Gridlock is good, Wall Street doesn’t like change,” said one senior Washington analyst. “You’re not going to have runaway spending increase, you won’t have a repeal of the Bush tax cuts, and there’s no legislative change that will roil industries.” Mind you...Wall Street investors and analysts don’t often agree on much of anything. Is gridlock good? Some think a political stalemate will be mostly bullish for the economy and for the stock market. Others noted that regardless of what happens in Washington, corporate earnings and economic growth will continue to drive the U.S stock market rally to five year highs. Still others see the “gridlock is good” idea as a myth. “What creates good markets in the face of gridlock is not gridlock,” said one New York chief investment officer. “It is other factors. Is the outcome of this election going to matter as much as housing, oil prices, the Federal Reserve or China? The answer in my view is no.” An academic analysis of long-term investment trends showed that stock markets do not necessarily thrive during political gridlock. In fact, the study showed smaller companies actually thrive when there is no gridlock and the Congress and President work in harmony. The study, which analyzed ten stock indexes and periods of political gridlock from 1949 through 2004, found that, adjusting for inflation, annual returns in gridlock periods averaged about 6%. In periods of political harmony, annual returns averaged about 22%. For the smallest companies in the study, the difference was even more pronounced. During periods of gridlock, annual returns averaged about 4.7% Web Site Page Design Tips: How to Avoid the Ignored Page Areas ten rally on elections as Wall Street bets change will lead to an environment more favorable to business. The prevailing wisdom is that a split in power in Washington will create legislative gridlock, slowing down regulatory change.Great web site design, heaps of content. But do you know which areas may be totally ignored. How can we avoid these blind spots and get the page viewers to concentrate on important information relating to the web site.The first stage of any web site design is the most important, planning the site layout page by page. Taking as read that we have all the information we need to construct the site, now we need to fill the pages. We have the content, but is it all going to be read? Are the viewer Some investors ran for cover Wednesday as stocks fell early in the day as the election results became known. Still, a pullback in stocks was to be expected after back-to-back sharp gains for the major indexes this week. Although professional investors are often viewed as being politically conservative, Wall Street likes what many voters hate: gridlock. The market likes to alleviate as many risks as possible, so a “non-activist” government is often seen as one less variable businesses must contend with. “Gridlock is good, Wall Street doesn’t like change,” said one senior Washington analyst. “You’re not going to have runaway spending increase, you won’t have a repeal of the Bush tax cuts, and there’s no legislative change that will roil industries.” Mind you...Wall Street investors and analysts don’t often agree on much of anything. Is gridlock good? Some think a political stalemate will be mostly bullish for the economy and for the stock market. Others noted that regardless of what happens in Washington, corporate earnings and economic growth will continue to drive the U.S stock market rally to five year highs. Still others see the “gridlock is good” idea as a myth. “What creates good markets in the face of gridlock is not gridlock,” said one New York chief investment officer. “It is other factors. Is the outcome of this election going to matter as much as housing, oil prices, the Federal Reserve or China? The answer in my view is no.” An academic analysis of long-term investment trends showed that stock markets do not necessarily thrive during political gridlock. In fact, the study showed smaller companies actually thrive when there is no gridlock and the Congress and President work in harmony. The study, which analyzed ten stock indexes and periods of political gridlock from 1949 through 2004, found that, adjusting for inflation, annual returns in gridlock periods averaged about 6%. In periods of political harmony, annual returns averaged about 22%. For the smallest companies in the study, the difference was even more pronounced. During periods of gridlock, annual returns averaged about 4.7% Background Checks: How They Can Determine Whether You Get Hired or Not! market likes to alleviate as many risks as possible, so a “non-activist” government is often seen as one less variable businesses must contend with.Background checks are utilized by companies today to decide whether or not you will be permitted to work for them. Information in these reports can reveal many things about you to a prospective employer; it is critical that you be aware of what a company may uncover via a background check before one is conducted. You need to be aware of what steps you must take to protect yourself should negative information about you be uncovered.Background checks [or reports] can range from a corroborating “Gridlock is good, Wall Street doesn’t like change,” said one senior Washington analyst. “You’re not going to have runaway spending increase, you won’t have a repeal of the Bush tax cuts, and there’s no legislative change that will roil industries.” Mind you...Wall Street investors and analysts don’t often agree on much of anything. Is gridlock good? Some think a political stalemate will be mostly bullish for the economy and for the stock market. Others noted that regardless of what happens in Washington, corporate earnings and economic growth will continue to drive the U.S stock market rally to five year highs. Still others see the “gridlock is good” idea as a myth. “What creates good markets in the face of gridlock is not gridlock,” said one New York chief investment officer. “It is other factors. Is the outcome of this election going to matter as much as housing, oil prices, the Federal Reserve or China? The answer in my view is no.” An academic analysis of long-term investment trends showed that stock markets do not necessarily thrive during political gridlock. In fact, the study showed smaller companies actually thrive when there is no gridlock and the Congress and President work in harmony. The study, which analyzed ten stock indexes and periods of political gridlock from 1949 through 2004, found that, adjusting for inflation, annual returns in gridlock periods averaged about 6%. In periods of political harmony, annual returns averaged about 22%. For the smallest companies in the study, the difference was even more pronounced. During periods of gridlock, annual returns averaged about 4.7% 4 Kinds of Good Debt market.Debt is a lot like cholesterol. Some debt is good and too much bad debt will make your life miserable. Through our financial lives, it’s only the good debt that we want to allow on our balance sheet. Good debt improves our lives over the course of time. Here are 4 types of good debt.Real Estate Real estate is the cornerstone of much wealth in the US. For most of us, our homes will be the largest and most valuable asset we’ll own. Unless you’ve “come int Others noted that regardless of what happens in Washington, corporate earnings and economic growth will continue to drive the U.S stock market rally to five year highs. Still others see the “gridlock is good” idea as a myth. “What creates good markets in the face of gridlock is not gridlock,” said one New York chief investment officer. “It is other factors. Is the outcome of this election going to matter as much as housing, oil prices, the Federal Reserve or China? The answer in my view is no.” An academic analysis of long-term investment trends showed that stock markets do not necessarily thrive during political gridlock. In fact, the study showed smaller companies actually thrive when there is no gridlock and the Congress and President work in harmony. The study, which analyzed ten stock indexes and periods of political gridlock from 1949 through 2004, found that, adjusting for inflation, annual returns in gridlock periods averaged about 6%. In periods of political harmony, annual returns averaged about 22%. For the smallest companies in the study, the difference was even more pronounced. During periods of gridlock, annual returns averaged about 4.7% Sun Zi Art of War - Two Essential Factors To Tap Momentum In Strategy do not necessarily thrive during political gridlock. In fact, the study showed smaller companies actually thrive when there is no gridlock and the Congress and President work in harmony.The person who knows how to exploit battle circumstances is able to command his troops like rolling logs and boulders. The characteristics of the logs and boulders are such that they are not dangerous when not moving, and have destructive effects when moving. If they are square they cease to move, when they are round, they roll. Thus the person who is adept at warfare can resembles that of moving logs and boulders moving down the mountain, when he uses battle situations. – Chapter Five, Sun The study, which analyzed ten stock indexes and periods of political gridlock from 1949 through 2004, found that, adjusting for inflation, annual returns in gridlock periods averaged about 6%. In periods of political harmony, annual returns averaged about 22%. For the smallest companies in the study, the difference was even more pronounced. During periods of gridlock, annual returns averaged about 4.7%, while in years of political harmony annual returns averaged 27%. “That sort of suggests when the government is in unity and can work together it actually does things to help businesses and small stocks,” said one of the study chairs. “Even in the 1990s there were times where small-stocks did better during the 2-year window when President Clinton actually had a harmonious Congress.” So...what does the current political landscape look like for Wall Street? Frankly, I don’t think it changes things very much at all; at least not for penny stock investors. Penny stock investors do not follow trends...and we certainly don’t hang our investment strategy on political gridlock, political harmony, or any other investment legends. R.I.S.K. is not a dirty four-letter word for penny stock investors. If anything, political uncertainty is more harmonious with our investment strategy. But increased risk may be something that the rest of the herd needs to get use to.
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