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"At least 10,000 jobs could be lost in the next 3 months", doesn't look too rosy! Hope they're not all contractors.
This 10k doesnt even include contractors does it? A contract is not a "job" in this context is it? The bank that is my current main client has got rid of about 15 of 30 contractors in the section I work, without having to announce a single layoff.
Though now there are far too many chiefs for the number of indians, you can see that it wont be far off.
"We're suffering the aftereffects of the collapse of a Tinker Bell financial market, one that depended heavily on borrowed money that has now vanished like pixie dust."
Bankers have been playng "Heads, you win; tails, you lose someone else's money. "
"Academics now feel that the 1929 slowdown morphed into a Great Depression in large part because the Fed tightened credit rather than loosening it. With that precedent in mind, you can see why Bernanke's Fed is cutting rates rapidly and throwing everything but the kitchen sink at today's problems. (Bernanke will probably throw that in too, if the Fed's plumbers can unbolt it.) None of this Alan Greenspan (remember him?) quarter-point-at-a-time stuff for him. "
"Okay. Is there good news here? Indeed, there is. Sooner or later, all this money being thrown at the debt markets will stabilize things. "
"But the costs will be steep. Those of us who have been prudent, lived within our means, and didn't overborrow are paying a huge price for this. Income on our Treasury bills, money market funds, and CDs has dropped sharply, thanks to the Fed's rate cuts, and our wealth has eroded relative to foreign currencies and commodities."
Just another article with the same underlying story.
You've read it already...
Yarr. Too much willy nilly spending on cheap credit lent to paupers who now can't afford to pay it back = banks not lending to each other = fed injecting cash into the system and lowering rates like the clappers = poor dollar value and overall cost to the hard working and people not spending more than their means.
At least 10,000 jobs could be lost in the UK's financial services industry during the next three months, according to a forecast by the CBI.
The employers' organisation's quarterly survey of the sector found that most companies thought the credit squeeze would get worse in the next six months.
CBI chief economist Ian McCafferty said: "This is a very serious crisis."
The report predicts that the UK will avoid outright recession, but says that finance jobs are already being cut.
City fears jobs losses
Conditions in the financial sector - which includes banks, building societies and insurance companies - have not improved since the credit crunch began six months ago, Mr McCafferty said.
"Some have suggested it's the worst financial crisis since the Second World War," he added.
"I think one of the key characteristics is that it will go on for quite some time to come."
The financial crisis, which began after banks made huge losses on investments backed by US mortgages, has caused chaos on US and global markets.
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