He's a good kid who's worked hard for three years. To end it at states is a nice way to end a career. |
I don't care for the name, but I understand his marketing standpoint on it, which he has total control over. |
I don't think people will be too worried about it. If things get back up quickly, people will forget about it pretty soon. |
I hope others look to him and say it can happen. Hopefully they realize patience is of virtue. |
I started looking into the cost of the equipment because it is a really good fitness program, especially when I only have a PE budget of a couple hundred bucks. |
I think we will see growth of 150,000 or 200,000 jobs per month by the spring. But we still have some structural issues in the labor market to work through, and the Fed wants to see a number of good months before they'll think about raising rates. |
If it is a matter of funding we could find funding to do that. It's just too important. |
If our officers don't want them or don't see a need for them, then we'll just drop it. |
If we're into July and we're still wondering what's going to happen with Iraq, that will not be a good thing. |
It does suggest that the overall economy is improving and for the market it is part of the recent theme -- all the numbers are coming in on the stronger side of expectations. |
It doesn't take much. One spouse loses a job or is unemployed for even a little while. |
It runs like a top, |
It's a continuing surprise, given weakness in other sectors of economy. Normally, the housing sector is very sensitive to the overall business cycle. |
It's a huge disappointment, a big surprise. |
It's a sign that things have bottomed out, but we're not seeing a sharp turnaround in capital spending just yet. So it's encouraging, but it doesn't suggest anything more than a relatively muted and fragile recovery. |