|
Post by meateater on Jul 25, 2024 13:27:18 GMT -5
Election year numbers. They're all cooked. A customer owns an eviction service. He has 3 crews and averages 320 evictions per week. He's been turning those numbers since spring '23. He would take on more but can't find the employees
So if they work 7 days they're doing over 45 evictions per day? 15 evictions per crew? Doubtful.
not if the workers are mexicans.
|
|
|
Post by ferris1248 on Jul 25, 2024 13:27:27 GMT -5
Election year numbers. They're all cooked. A customer owns an eviction service. He has 3 crews and averages 320 evictions per week. He's been turning those numbers since spring '23. He would take on more but can't find the employees
So if they work 7 days they're doing over 45 evictions per day? 15 evictions per crew? Doubtful.
I wonder if they are paid overtime? Or maybe they're illegal immigrants.
|
|
|
Post by luapnor on Jul 25, 2024 13:32:52 GMT -5
|
|
|
Post by cyclist on Jul 25, 2024 13:34:01 GMT -5
Work hard play hard....going to Croatia (Istria, Zagrab, Plitzvick), Slovenia (Triglov, Lake Bled) and Trieste (Italy). Making too much money, gotta spend some!
|
|
|
Post by ferris1248 on Jul 25, 2024 13:38:58 GMT -5
Go for it. Enjoy yourselves.
|
|
|
Post by meateater on Jul 25, 2024 13:40:02 GMT -5
Work hard play hard....going to Croatia (Istria, Zagrab, Plitzvick), Slovenia (Triglov, Lake Bled) and Trieste (Italy). Making too much money, gotta spend some! bring me back some potica. your gonna love slovenia.
|
|
|
Post by ferris1248 on Jul 25, 2024 13:42:22 GMT -5
meh.........The covid money is gone and folks aren't buying appliances and other items with a long lifespan.
|
|
|
Post by nuevowavo on Jul 25, 2024 13:43:08 GMT -5
Whats your point? That Boeing orders dried up after a piece of a plane popped off in midair? Whole lotta green lines to the left.
|
|
|
Post by ferris1248 on Jul 25, 2024 13:44:52 GMT -5
Y'all excuse me. I gotta go sell a truck.
|
|
|
Post by toldya on Jul 25, 2024 14:56:08 GMT -5
Work hard play hard....going to Croatia (Istria, Zagrab, Plitzvick), Slovenia (Triglov, Lake Bled) and Trieste (Italy). Making too much money, gotta spend some! Looks like a lot of carbon footprint there.
|
|
|
Post by garycoleco on Jul 25, 2024 18:06:04 GMT -5
Election year numbers. They're all cooked. A customer owns an eviction service. He has 3 crews and averages 320 evictions per week. He's been turning those numbers since spring '23. He would take on more but can't find the employees
So if they work 7 days they're doing over 45 evictions per day? 15 evictions per crew? Doubtful.
Not sure he would lie. There's nothing to gain and I've known him for 20 years...
|
|
|
Post by johnnybandit on Jul 25, 2024 19:14:32 GMT -5
LMAO Durables have always been volatile...... Investors know this.... But the graph you showed.... Proves that In the last year of Trump.... Durable goods were a bad bet..... And investors ran tom it..... But yet... Under Biden Durables were not only stable... But consistently profitable..... Proves you do not know shit about the graph you posted...
|
|
|
Post by toldya on Jul 25, 2024 19:22:08 GMT -5
LMAO Durables have always been volatile...... Investors know this.... But the graph you showed.... Proves that In the last year of Trump.... Durable goods were a bad bet..... And investors ran tom it..... But yet... Under Biden Durables were not only stable... But consistently profitable..... Proves you do not know shit about the graph you posted... It's kinda pretty. Adds a little pizazz to the screen.
|
|
|
Post by cadman on Jul 25, 2024 19:44:04 GMT -5
Whats your point? That Boeing orders dried up after a piece of a plane popped off in midair? Whole lotta green lines to the left.
Give that man the cigar! We have the answer! Commercial aircraft orders pull down orders
The numbers: Orders for durable goods fell 6.6% in June, the Commerce Department said Thursday. It is the sharpest drop since the pandemic. Economists had forecast a 0.3% rise in orders for durable goods in June - products made to last at least three years. It is the first decline in durable goods after four straight gains and was driven by a 20.5% drop in transportation orders. Nondefense orders plummeted 127%. Key details: There were signs of strength under the surface. Excluding the volatile transportation sector, orders were up 0.5%. Core capital goods orders, which exclude volatile sectors like transportation and defense, rose 1% last month after a 0.9% fall in May. And shipments of core capex orders up 0.1% in June. www.morningstar.com/news/marketwatch/20240725277/durable-goods-orders-plummeted-in-june-but-one-sector-was-largely-to-blame
|
|
|
Post by johngalt on Jul 26, 2024 9:07:21 GMT -5
i dont go by much the media says, 4 kids all working , few friends most working and there kids, couple ballers like myself. just about everyone i know says prices for stuff are still very high, gas still high and times are tight nothing has changed. credit card debt is the highest in the history of the world. so upper middle class and ballers are just fine everyone else feels the effects of this shitty economy. job reports and gdps dont mean shit to most people. posting fairy tales and empty promises is not gonna get anyone to change there mind on who to vote for. But if FF45 were to be reelected all that would be different, and the number would be magically considered legit on January 22nd, right? Only a fool would believe that. The damage that has been done to our economy starting with the covid hoax and with the trillions of dollars spent is going to take years to fix, if can ever be fixed. At least we can start with people in government that understands money doesn’t grow on trees and that massive cut backs and layoffs in government are badly needed.
|
|