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City Unemployment Rises to 10.3 Percent

Started by stevejhx
about 16 years ago
Posts: 12656
Member since: Feb 2008
Discussion about
New York City’s unemployment rate rose to 10.3 percent in September as summer jobs programs ended and businesses that usually add staff in the fall held off on hiring, the state’s Department of Labor reported on Thursday. Over all, the employment picture was “markedly weaker” than it had been in August, when the city’s unemployment rate was 10.2 percent, said James Brown, an analyst for the Labor Department. (The department revised the August rate, which had been reported as 10.3 percent.) http://cityroom.blogs.nytimes.com/2009/10/15/city-unemployment-rises-to-103-percent/ Guess those record bonuses haven't kicked in yet.
Response by waverly
about 16 years ago
Posts: 1638
Member since: Jul 2008

It's one thing to parade a few people through a process and quite another to extend offers to and hire people. Firms do not just hire people and have them do nothing so it looks like they are doing well.

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Response by manhattanfox
about 16 years ago
Posts: 1275
Member since: Sep 2007

that is frightening -- sounds like enron manufacturing fake trading floors for investor walk throughs...

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Response by aboutready
about 16 years ago
Posts: 16354
Member since: Oct 2007

Waverly, that is exactly what many law firms did with regards to this years summer class.

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Response by 80sMan
about 16 years ago
Posts: 633
Member since: Jun 2008

There's no such thing a expecting to be flat year over year on Wall Street. You can't walk into your manager's office and tell him/her you're not growing profit/revenue in 2010. You do that and you're fired. So every manager goes to the budget meeting with their number of new hires needed to grow the business. If the business doesn't grow and the manager doesn't meet his budget, people get fired, a new business plan is written up and the cycle continues for 2011. If the business is successful half the people quit anyway because some other firm heard that so-and-so firm was killing it in such-and-such a market and they want to steal some of their people away. Another dirty trick is to pretend to be looking for someone when all you want is information about what the other guys are doing, what strategies they're using, how much money they're making.

Normally something like 25% of Wall Street employees move around every year."Executive Recruiters" are the middlemen who help these Wall Streeters move around from firm to firm. Sometimes they deal with the rocket science types but this tends to be a niche market with very few hires every year.

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Response by 80sMan
about 16 years ago
Posts: 633
Member since: Jun 2008

Wall Street hiring is a game of musical chairs. Goldman->Morgan->BarcLehs->Citi->BAC... If what you say is true the ex Wall streeters sitting around doing nothing can start thinking about getting back into the game.

Nobody is hiring you to take risk/build a business/make serious money unless you are a known player. Although the opposite happens. The CISCO analyst at Morgan will become CISCO's COO but the COO from CISCO can't get a job buffing knobs at Goldman.

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Response by batraa
about 16 years ago
Posts: 55
Member since: May 2008

waverly - thanks for the up to date color on the job market. question on the staffing market - how much of the staffing "arbitrage" is health care related? (clearly for lower end jobs). trying to understand the effects on the public staffing companies.

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Response by nyc10022
about 16 years ago
Posts: 9868
Member since: Aug 2008

"Where's the 20-30% collapse on NYC housing forecast by the bears here in Spring of this year?

MOST OF YOU DON'T HAVE A CLUE."

ROTFL..... the guy yelling that others don't have a clue is the one who missed that we have exactly the specific collapse he's denying!

Dude, don't you read the newspapers or anything?

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