Home › Forums › Financial Markets/Economics › I don’t know what your models are saying, Chris
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August 1, 2007 at 2:14 PM #69331August 1, 2007 at 3:12 PM #69286The-ShovelerParticipant
Sort of Off topic,
We are seeing alot of the engineers (software types mostly) who don’t already own homes (this is in North L.A. area), leave for Bigger San Jose firms.
You Engineering types Down in SD seeing this as well.
I guess there is no advantage anymore to staying down here at the moment.
August 1, 2007 at 3:12 PM #69358The-ShovelerParticipantSort of Off topic,
We are seeing alot of the engineers (software types mostly) who don’t already own homes (this is in North L.A. area), leave for Bigger San Jose firms.
You Engineering types Down in SD seeing this as well.
I guess there is no advantage anymore to staying down here at the moment.
August 1, 2007 at 10:49 PM #69409CoronitaParticipantSort of Off topic, We are seeing alot of the engineers (software types mostly) who don't already own homes (this is in North L.A. area), leave for Bigger San Jose firms. You Engineering types Down in SD seeing this as well. I guess there is no advantage anymore to staying down here at the moment.
.. Tech is back in the bay area. I've been getting calls from headhunters offering positions. Talked to a few of them, got a few offers for the hell of it,..Found out all are all well funded startups that offered 20-30k more than what I make down here, and the current company I work for isn't exactly paying shabby. If i didn't have a family to consider, I'd move back there because I really miss the rush. Now, the hires are different now. It seems like they're looking for more higher level engineer types (architects/designers/system folks), because most of the grunt work is oversees, but that's just what I've been seeing.
The issue is that most of the tech industries here in SD are big companies with limited growth..And things move slow here. I guess working at these big bloated companies means you'll be content to see at most a 2-3% raise, and see a promotion if the guy above you dies or gets fired, because there's not much lateral or upward movement among companies here. Fortunately, I work for a company that is decent (non-defense/non-telco), so it's alright (for now)….
August 1, 2007 at 10:49 PM #69482CoronitaParticipantSort of Off topic, We are seeing alot of the engineers (software types mostly) who don't already own homes (this is in North L.A. area), leave for Bigger San Jose firms. You Engineering types Down in SD seeing this as well. I guess there is no advantage anymore to staying down here at the moment.
.. Tech is back in the bay area. I've been getting calls from headhunters offering positions. Talked to a few of them, got a few offers for the hell of it,..Found out all are all well funded startups that offered 20-30k more than what I make down here, and the current company I work for isn't exactly paying shabby. If i didn't have a family to consider, I'd move back there because I really miss the rush. Now, the hires are different now. It seems like they're looking for more higher level engineer types (architects/designers/system folks), because most of the grunt work is oversees, but that's just what I've been seeing.
The issue is that most of the tech industries here in SD are big companies with limited growth..And things move slow here. I guess working at these big bloated companies means you'll be content to see at most a 2-3% raise, and see a promotion if the guy above you dies or gets fired, because there's not much lateral or upward movement among companies here. Fortunately, I work for a company that is decent (non-defense/non-telco), so it's alright (for now)….
August 1, 2007 at 10:53 PM #69411CoronitaParticipantlet's see…. "Yahoo Message Boards"–presumably several tens of thousands (hundreds?) readers/posters/viewers vs piggington.com–readership/posters/people who have any clue this wonderful resource exist…statistically insignificant great comparison, though, fat_lazy π
If you read the Yahoo Finance Message boards, you'd see that the posters are just folks with bear and bull positions, which alternate in posting how "smart" they are when the markets move in the direction to their positions, and suddently disappear when the market moves in a direction causes them to eat their pants. It appears, that there is a fair share of posters here that are doing this here as well.
Lately, just by reading Piggington forum post, I can tell how the market did for that day, because you can see a lot more bear "see I told you so" posts on down days, and bull "see I told you so" posts on up days.
August 1, 2007 at 10:53 PM #69484CoronitaParticipantlet's see…. "Yahoo Message Boards"–presumably several tens of thousands (hundreds?) readers/posters/viewers vs piggington.com–readership/posters/people who have any clue this wonderful resource exist…statistically insignificant great comparison, though, fat_lazy π
If you read the Yahoo Finance Message boards, you'd see that the posters are just folks with bear and bull positions, which alternate in posting how "smart" they are when the markets move in the direction to their positions, and suddently disappear when the market moves in a direction causes them to eat their pants. It appears, that there is a fair share of posters here that are doing this here as well.
Lately, just by reading Piggington forum post, I can tell how the market did for that day, because you can see a lot more bear "see I told you so" posts on down days, and bull "see I told you so" posts on up days.
August 1, 2007 at 10:56 PM #69486CoronitaParticipantGood lord. The Dow futures are down 170 points already! Anyone who is long this market is going to get destroyed tomorrow. Bring on the carnage, I say! We need to get home prices and stock prices back down to reasonable prices that make some sense.
Next prediction? π
Mine: the market is going to swing back and forth bigtime around for the next 2-3 months as folks try to sort through the garbage of earnings/ sub prime mess/ etc.Β
August 1, 2007 at 10:56 PM #69413CoronitaParticipantGood lord. The Dow futures are down 170 points already! Anyone who is long this market is going to get destroyed tomorrow. Bring on the carnage, I say! We need to get home prices and stock prices back down to reasonable prices that make some sense.
Next prediction? π
Mine: the market is going to swing back and forth bigtime around for the next 2-3 months as folks try to sort through the garbage of earnings/ sub prime mess/ etc.Β
August 1, 2007 at 11:06 PM #69415CoronitaParticipantI don't know what is wrong with the Lucent folks. A guy I worked with was working in Lucent and they invested all his 401(k) in Lucent stock. He lost it all when LU melted down. (I was a 'value investor' on the downward slide – bought into the Bell Labs sheen – and got creamed)
It's not just lucent folks. It's the average employee at any company. Look at all the Enron folks.
Imho, one of the worst decisions I've seen some folks do
1)Hold on to vested stock options for a long period of time
2)Buy and hold on to ESPP stock purchases for a long time
3)Invest 401k money into company stock
4)Buy the company' stock with Net income.
It's not that any of the decisions above are bad by themselves, but I've seen folks do 1-4 simultaneously. Folks usally do this when the company stock is rallying ,because of greed. But this is really asking for it because if the company does bad
1)The stock you purchased with net income loses money
2)You screw your retirement account (401k)
3)You end up doubly screwed on the ESPP from (a)share value loss and (b) paying for taxes on income from ESPP share purchases due to how the IRS recognizes ESPP shares differential from the FMV as income versus cap gains
4)Your options probably go underwater, rendering them useless
5)You might even lose your job due to the performance of your company.
Hence, when you are in the most financial crisis, any financial backup you had went with fall of your company.
August 1, 2007 at 11:06 PM #69488CoronitaParticipantI don't know what is wrong with the Lucent folks. A guy I worked with was working in Lucent and they invested all his 401(k) in Lucent stock. He lost it all when LU melted down. (I was a 'value investor' on the downward slide – bought into the Bell Labs sheen – and got creamed)
It's not just lucent folks. It's the average employee at any company. Look at all the Enron folks.
Imho, one of the worst decisions I've seen some folks do
1)Hold on to vested stock options for a long period of time
2)Buy and hold on to ESPP stock purchases for a long time
3)Invest 401k money into company stock
4)Buy the company' stock with Net income.
It's not that any of the decisions above are bad by themselves, but I've seen folks do 1-4 simultaneously. Folks usally do this when the company stock is rallying ,because of greed. But this is really asking for it because if the company does bad
1)The stock you purchased with net income loses money
2)You screw your retirement account (401k)
3)You end up doubly screwed on the ESPP from (a)share value loss and (b) paying for taxes on income from ESPP share purchases due to how the IRS recognizes ESPP shares differential from the FMV as income versus cap gains
4)Your options probably go underwater, rendering them useless
5)You might even lose your job due to the performance of your company.
Hence, when you are in the most financial crisis, any financial backup you had went with fall of your company.
August 2, 2007 at 12:25 AM #69425Chris Scoreboard JohnstonParticipantPlease keep in mind when watching the overnight globex sessions, that they are the small investors, which do not control the markets. Most of the trades are 1 and 2 lot trades, which is why you see such dramatic swings, there is just no volume. Do not get too emotionally involved one way or another when you see a huge move at midnight, due to the fact that they are most often caused by small volume.
As far as the comment about throwing all the models out because it is different this time, I do not feel it is fair to criticize the bulls in stocks or RE who argue that it is different this time therefore prices cannot go down, yet use the argument that it is different this time to support why prices should go down. Which is it, is it different this time or not? If it is, then you cannot throw out the bullish arguments in stocks or RE, if it is the you have to grant them the possibility that the bulls could be right. If it is not different this time, the models of the past cannot be thrown out. I do not think it is different this time in either market, cycles exist, and they will play out.
August 2, 2007 at 12:25 AM #69498Chris Scoreboard JohnstonParticipantPlease keep in mind when watching the overnight globex sessions, that they are the small investors, which do not control the markets. Most of the trades are 1 and 2 lot trades, which is why you see such dramatic swings, there is just no volume. Do not get too emotionally involved one way or another when you see a huge move at midnight, due to the fact that they are most often caused by small volume.
As far as the comment about throwing all the models out because it is different this time, I do not feel it is fair to criticize the bulls in stocks or RE who argue that it is different this time therefore prices cannot go down, yet use the argument that it is different this time to support why prices should go down. Which is it, is it different this time or not? If it is, then you cannot throw out the bullish arguments in stocks or RE, if it is the you have to grant them the possibility that the bulls could be right. If it is not different this time, the models of the past cannot be thrown out. I do not think it is different this time in either market, cycles exist, and they will play out.
August 2, 2007 at 8:32 AM #69543(former)FormerSanDieganParticipant“I do not think it is different this time in either market, cycles exist, and they will play out.”
Well said.
August 2, 2007 at 8:32 AM #69469(former)FormerSanDieganParticipant“I do not think it is different this time in either market, cycles exist, and they will play out.”
Well said.
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