jusme: What “stock market” company is going to produce jobs that has their savings/profits decimated in the market?
Answers and Views:
Answer by RageFury
None.
not many… aren’t you glad that the house made such a HUGE deal out of something that no one usually even notices? lol
how much did the stock market go down the last time they passed this bill?
but oh, now this time, many cons said “ECONOMIC DOOM” if we passed it… and then when it passed, some people believed them…
Answer by Growth vs OilUsing Republicans logic it is not Wall Street`s job to create jobs. They told us in 2005 that it is not the government`s job to create jobs but now they tell us Obama is not creating enough.Answer by Hugh Jorgan
???!!Answer by Scales of Justice 3
You need to direct this question to the Grand Loser In Charge, Barack Insane Obama.Answer by TheGuyRick
The price of a company’s stock is a measure of its asset value, not its profits and definitely not its savings.
And regardless of stock values a company will hire when it thinks the employee will add to revenue in excess of the costs of hiring and keeping the employee. Even a company with dropping asset values will hire an employee who will increase its revenue.
Answer by d/dx+d/dy+d/dzAny industrial company holds its reserves in bank accounts and treasury bills to limit risk. The company risk is in the company business, not in the stock market. The stock market only affects the ability of an industrial company to raise new capital: that is in a weak stock market the existing shareholders suffer more dillution when new shares are issued. The company management balances the effect of dilution against the growth in profits that new capital can bring. Fewer companies will issue new equity in a weak stock market, and that will reduce job growth from that source. Companies that issued equity in stronger stock markets are still sitting on the cash and will still create jobs where it makes business sense. A company with a strong balance sheet will invest (and create jobs) during poor economic times to inrease market share when the economy turns around.Answer by Bonami
Stock price has little to do with demand for a product.
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