Williams hears viewers' plea for good news
Posted on 4:36 PM, under Beliefs, happiness, helping hand, inspriration, stress relief
When you turn on the news what do you see and hear? Is it all negative? At Know News you will actually experience a much different approach with positive news and news that doesn't only look at the negative.
Posted on 4:36 PM, under Beliefs, happiness, helping hand, inspriration, stress relief
Posted on 11:27 AM, under Beliefs, Earnings, economy, inspriration
Posted on 7:46 AM, under Beliefs, Earnings, Global Economy
Posted on 2:11 PM, under Beliefs, election, happiness, inspriration, Perception, stress relief
(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."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.
Posted on 8:03 PM, under Beliefs, economy, happiness, helping hand, hiring, Perception, stress relief
Posted on 5:08 PM, under banking, Beliefs, Earnings, economy, Global Economy, Perception, Stocks
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.
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."
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..."
Posted on 5:17 PM, under Beliefs, economy, inspriration, Jobs, Perception, Pessimism, Stocks

Posted on 7:49 AM, under Beliefs, Earnings, Perception, Stocks
Posted on 9:32 AM, under Beliefs, economy, election, Global Economy, inspriration, Perception, Pessimism, Stocks

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?
Posted on 9:25 AM, under Beliefs, economy, Global Economy, Jobs, Perception, Stocks
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.
DOW JONES NEWSWIRESPosted on 7:52 AM, under Beliefs, Earnings, economy, helping hand, inspriration, Perception
Americans are eating out less, driving down restaurant profitsaround 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.
Posted on 8:54 AM, under Beliefs, happiness, inspriration, Perception, percerption, stress relief

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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