Showing posts with label Beliefs. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Beliefs. Show all posts

NBC anchor says request for positive stories has hit ‘incredible nerve’

NEW YORK - Between the drumbeat of bad economic stories, two wars and a winter that won't quit, NBC's Brian Williams knows he's been anchoring a depressing "Nightly News" for a depressed audience.
Still, even he was shocked at the thousands of responses he has received in less than two days after asking viewers to suggest some good news to report.

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TORONTO - Shoppers Drug Mart Corp. (TSX:SC) reported a fourth-quarter profit boost of 14.4 per cent as sales revenue increased on the expansion of its store network and robust pharmacy sales.

Sales for the quarter ended Dec. 31 amounted to $173 million or 80 cents per share, versus $151 million or 70 cents per share in the year-earlier period. Overall sales rose 15.1 per cent to $2.5 billion while sales at stores open at least a year were up 3.6 per cent.

Shoppers chief executive Jurgen Schreiber said the company was pleased to "deliver sector-leading growth in these challenging times."

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Ross Stores Inc.’s same-store sales in January fell 1 percent year over year while overall sales were up 4 percent.
Pleasanton-based Ross (NASDAQ: ROST) on Thursday reported sales of $365 million for the four weeks ending Jan. 31, compared with sales of $350 million in the comparable period of 2008.
Ross put its sales for the fourth quarter ending Jan. 31 at $1.73 billion, up 5 percent compared with $1.65 billion for the comparable period last year. Same-store sales for the fourth quarter were down 1 percent versus a year ago.

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There are four days until the Inauguration, and the country is alight with excitement, not just about the arrival of Barack Obama in the White House but also for the beginning of a new era of civic engagement.

We’ve tapped into this energy with our Ideas for Change in America, and today we held a press event at the National Press Club in Washington DC to announce the winners of the competition. The 10 winning ideas reflect the diverse interests of the millions of people calling for change across the country, and include ideas for securing universal heath care, LGBT rights, and sustainable green energy. All winning ideas can be viewed at www.change.org/ideas.

The winning ideas were accepted on behalf of the Presidential Transition Team by Macon Phillips, the Director of New Media and the person who oversees our second-favorite website, Change.gov. Macon then addressed the attendees of the event, which included nonprofit leaders and grassroots activists, and spoke about the importance the administration will place on citizen-driven efforts like Ideas for Change.

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How much good news is there on the news these days?

Few.

Bad news clearly receives a lot more attention than the good stuff. But good things do happen all the time and they must be encouraged.

So when something positive has happened to you, when someone has been exceptionally helpful or when something has changed your life positively, why not say Thank You!

Thanks-O-Meter is a site that collects all the nice things people do and experience. The site is public access and no membership is required to express your own gratitude. Stories can be searched for by keywords.

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When Will This Recession Finally End?

There's really just one question that matters this new year. When will the recession end?

OK, I lied. There's another question that matters even more. Will the recession ever end?
I have a lot of institutional clients who take very seriously the idea that this recession could be permanent. In their minds, it could turn out to be more like a depression. Even when we pull out of the worst of it, we'll be stuck with year after year of slow growth.
Pretty much no one thinks this recession could possibly already be over. And only a few brave souls dare to consider that it might only take another quarter or so to hit bottom. So it's just a matter of, how bad is it really?
Call me crazy, but I actually think we could all end up being pretty pleasantly surprised. I admit I was one of the last people on earth to agree we were in recession in the first place. So let me make up for that mistake: I'll be the first person to say it's over.
I don't mean to get carried away on wings of optimism here. But there really are some hopeful signs. Some of the same symptoms that, earlier this year, gave us an early warning that recession was lurking are now pointing in a more hopeful direction.

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(Times Union (Albany, NY) Via Acquire Media NewsEdge) Dec. 3--COLONIE -- You're standing at Osborne and Albany Shaker roads, in tony Loudonville.To the southwest is a Rite Aid drugstore. To the northeast is another Rite Aid. And to the northwest is the corner where Walgreen Co. has been buying land, including a $2 million purchase in October.One intersection. Two existing drugstores. One planned drugstore.Overkill? Perhaps.But the intersection is not unique. You'll come across similar corners in much of the Capital Region, following the drugstore building boom of recent years.

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(Fortune Magazine) -- Boring is beautiful - or so it feels in this time of wild and crazy stock market swings. In this case we're talking about investment-grade corporate bonds, which are dirt-cheap right now for the same reason that stocks are: The market turmoil has pounded down their prices. The result is historic opportunities in bonds issued by blue-chip companies.

Right now investment-grade bonds maturing in ten years or longer are yielding an average 8.4%, according to Barclays, a remarkable 5.7 percentage points more than ten-year Treasuries.
"Today's spreads are the highest we've seen since 1931,"
says economist Michael Darda of MKM Partners, a trading and research firm. Or as bond guru and PIMCO chief Bill Gross keeps saying, stocks are pricing in a recession, and bonds are priced for a depression. A depression isn't likely, so it's time to pounce.


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Some companies are promising not to lay off any workers, even during times of financial hardship.

NEW YORK (CNNMoney.com) -- In the midst of a recession, job cut announcements have become a daily occurrence. But some employers have promised no pink slips, and are sticking to it.
So far this week around 40,000 job cuts have been announced by an array of companies as varied as Dow Chemical, Electronic Arts, the National Football League and Sony Corp.
But even as the number of unemployed grows, some companies say their workers have nothing to fear.
"I have never in my 13 years [at the company] felt that my job is in jeopardy due to the economy," said Jill Kronman, a flight attendant for Southwest Airlines (LUV, Fortune 500).That's because Southwest is committed to avoiding layoffs at all costs - and they're not alone.

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US shares echoed gains in stock markets worldwide on hopes that new stimulus plans in the US and other countries will revive global economic growth.

The Dow Jones index ended Monday up 299 points or 3.5% to 8,932, shrugging off Friday's grim unemployment data. The Nasdaq and S&P's 500 also gained.

In the UK, the FTSE 100 ended up 6.2%, while Germany's Dax added 7.6%, and France's Cac finished up 8.7%.Earlier in the day, stock markets around Asia also raced ahead.

"Despite bad US jobs data [announced on Friday], markets are gaining on a sense that they've hit the bottom and expectations for economic stimulus measures being put out by many governments," said Hiroake Osakabe at Chibagin Asset Management.

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For some people, bargain prices and new workplace advantages make the economic downturn a time to profit.

Stephen Lasher reads all the dire economic forecasts declaring this recession the most worrisome since the Great Depression. But life doesn't seem so bad to Lasher. In fact, his horizons have never looked brighter.

Last year, the 33-year-old Columbia Business School grad landed a great job at media company NBC Universal. Now his spending money stretches further than before, thanks to retail store sales. Last month, he closed on his first home: a one-bedroom waterfront condo in a complex with a gym, pool and doorman.

"I am feeling good," Lasher says. "The housing prices were out of control before. . . . Now I was not only able to get a good price, but I was also able to get a mortgage interest rate well below what I thought would have been possible."



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Visitors to e-commerce sites spent $846 million on Monday, an increase of 15 percent over the same day a year ago, according to ComScore.
Monday, referred to as Cyber Monday by online retailers, capped off a successful Thanksgiving holiday weekend for the industry, which overall saw spending jump 13 percent.
It's a welcome relief for an industry that was mostly bracing for the worst.
"Consumers are clearly responding positively to retailers' aggressive online discounts," ComScore Chairman Gian Fulgoni said in a statement. "With Cyber Monday promotions beginning in earnest over the Thanksgiving weekend, consumers have finally begun to open their wallets, setting off a streak of four consecutive days of extremely strong growth..."

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The markets may be in turmoil. But not all the news is bad.
The editors of Kiplinger's Personal Finance and Kiplinger's Forecasting came up with ten things
going right these days. See if you agree:


1.Oil Loses Its Swagger: With the U.S. and global economy hurting, oil prices have dropped more
than 50% in just three months, from $147 a barrel in July to the $65-70 range. .
2. A Tipping Point for the Auto Industry: After years of talk and false starts, finally, all the major
carmakers are furiously developing hybrid and alternative-fuel vehicles that could lessen our dependence on foreign oil. Meanwhile, desperate dealers are offering unheard-of incentives on new, gas-fired models.
3. Interest Rates Are Low and Headed Lower: The prime rate is at 4.5%, which is driving down
interest rates on home-equity lines of credit and some consumer loans.
4. Homes Are More Affordable: Real estate, which was overpriced during the housing bubble, has
returned to earth. That's especially good news for first-time home buyers who were priced out of the
market.
5. Bank Savings Have Never Been Safer: The $700-billion federal rescue plan more than doubles
the amount of federal deposit insurance on individual bank accounts, to $250,000 from $100,000. Uncle Sam is also now providing providing unlimited FDIC insurance on non-interest-bearing accounts, covering virtually all of the nation's small businesses.
6. Stocks Are on Sale, and Many Bonds Offer Terrific Yields: For example, shares of AT&T
(symbol T) sell for about eight times estimated 2009 earnings and yield 6%. Networking giant Cisco
Systems (CSCO) sells for only ten times earnings estimates for its July 2009 fiscal year. Johnson &
Johnson (JNJ), as steady an Eddie as you'll find, sells for just 13 times '09 forecasts.
7. The Miracle of Technological Innovation Continues: Been to Best Buy, Sam's or Costco
lately? For $799, you can now buy a 42-inch, high-definition flat-panel TV that will knock your socks off. Throw in another $200, and you can get a surround-sound system to truly transform your den into a home theater.
8. Prosperity Reigns in the Heartland: The fall harvest is shaping up as one of the best ever,
despite the destructive weather and floods in the Mississippi River corridor since last spring. Exports of U.S. farm products will increase more than 40% by value this year. And recent years of high profits have allowed farmers to pay down debt so low that it accounts for a measly 9% of their assets providing all the credit they'll need for 2009 operations.
9. A New Tone and Direction in Washington: As we are starting to see, the election of a new
chief executive should provide at least 100 days of galvanizing certainty for markets, and a new direction and sense of purpose for the country.
10. Shoppers Can Expect Great Gift Buys This Holiday Season: Retailers depend on robust
end-of-year sales to turn a profit, but for 2008, the National Federation of Retailers forecasts
holiday spending will increase only 2.2% from last year. That won't beat inflation, butt's good
news for bargain hunters.

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By Nicole Maestri
NEW YORK (Reuters) - Discount retailer Dollar Tree Inc (DLTR.O: Quote, Profile, Research, Stock Buzz) said on Tuesday quarterly profit rose 20 percent as more customers came into its stores for low prices on basic items like food and cleaning supplies.
While other retailers have cut their sales and profit forecast for the crucial year-end holiday quarter, Dollar Tree, which sells most of its merchandise for $1, expects its momentum to continue into the fourth quarter as shoppers look to stretch limited budgets.

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MEMPHIS, Tenn., Nov 26, 2008 (BUSINESS WIRE) -- Fred's, Inc. (FRED:
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FRED 11.10, -0.40, -3.5%) today reported financial results for the third quarter and nine months ended November 1, 2008.
For the third quarter of 2008, Fred's reported net income of $6.1 million or $0.15 per diluted share, up 32% from net income of $4.6 million or $0.12 per diluted share in the year-earlier quarter.
For the nine months ended November 1, 2008, net income totaled $14.4 million or $0.36 per diluted share, inclusive of net costs associated with the closing of 74 stores and 22 pharmacies, pursuant to the Company's previously announced program to close 75 underperforming stores and 22 underperforming pharmacies in 2008. Excluding net costs associated with the store restructuring program, net income was $18.9 million or $0.47 per diluted share for the first nine months of 2008. In the year-earlier period, Fred's net income totaled $15.1 million or $0.38 per diluted share.

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Why all those Great Depression analogies are wrong.

It's difficult to avoid the comparisons between the current sad state of financial affairs and the Great Depression. "This is not like 1987 or 1998 or 2001," Merrill Lynch CEO John Thain said at a conference on Nov. 11. "We will in fact look back to the 1929 period to see the kind of slowdown we are seeing now." Time depicted President-elect Barack Obama on its cover as Franklin Delano Roosevelt. And in Washington, the buzz is all about what the new team will do in its first 100 days. What's next? Show trials in Moscow?


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Over the last few days, I've had numerous emails from you asking: is the global financial system actually going to melt down? Will the various bailout packages on the table work?
Let's use those questions to dive into two of the five steps in the next-gen business construction kit we discussed here recently: how the macro landscape is changing, and what new DNA is.
Here's the good news. We're probably not in for a full-blown depression - one characterized by 25% unemployment, for example. We're probably in for a protracted period of stagnation and malaise. Japan's been going through one for the last two decades, and the Japanese banking crisis is the closest parallel to today's global pandemic.


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DOW JONES NEWSWIRES
Ross Stores Inc. (ROST) posted an 18% rise in fiscal third-quarter net income, as inventory and cost reductions offset the impact of softening sales tied to the economic slump.

The discount retailer lowered its fourth-quarter and full-year outlooks, citing the deteriorating economic outlook, and said it expects heavy discounting during the holiday shopping season.

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Americans are eating out less, driving down restaurant profits

around the country.

But some eateries are doing better.

The first is McDonald’s, where profits grew 11 percent last quarter. A recession would seem to be good news for inexpensive food.

The second is a plucky, five-year-old community kitchen in Salt Lake City called the One World Cafe. Thanks in part to its pay-as-you-wish pricing policy, One World has seen its traffic grow by 15 percent this quarter.

Prices aren’t the only negotiable thing at One World. There’s no set menu, and diners choose whatever size portion they’d like. The restaurant also lets customers work off the cost of their meal by volunteering.


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In a presidential campaign marked by bitter and often gratuitous negativity, Barack Obama campaigned on hope, painting the possibility of a better future. Millions across the U.S. and abroad were moved by his message.
Even amidst economic crisis and international turmoil, a shared sense of hope lifted and opened people's hearts, seeding their better dreams.
And with Obama's decisive win on November 4th, hope erupted into effusive joy. For millions of his supporters, dreams came true. "Yes, we can" morphed into "Yes, we did." Those highs will fade. Life goes on. Our daily routines - commuting, work, buying groceries, paying bills - eventually flatten such emotional peaks into foggy memories. Sobering us up further, we're told that economic times will get worse before they get better. Millions face or fear joblessness, lost homes, and more

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