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Posted: Tue Aug 25, 2009 3:24 pm
Drop your homework off here. If you weren't in class, but wanted to be in class but were to lazy to not be in it, don;t worry about it, but this is only an only one time thing after that I'm not going to be lenient.
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Posted: Tue Aug 25, 2009 4:13 pm
Stocks and Stuff, By Virginia Pure
Stocks are how companies get funded to grow larger. Usually, when someone wants to start a business, they pay for it with loans or even their own credit cards. Once they grow the company enough, they can get bank loans, or even float their own bonds to individual investors. But, eventually they will need a lot of money to really take the business to the next phase.
This is when they will sell the first stocks, called “taking the company public”. Once that happens, no individual person owns the company because they have sold it to the stockholders.
The stock market is also an economic indicator of how well the economy is doing. If investors are confident in the economy, they will buy stocks. Some experts believe it can often predict by about six months what the savviest investors think the economy will be doing.
Greed, like crime, does not pay. All it does is bring chaos to economy (and the rest of the world). A variety of factors are contributing to the fall of the economy into an imminent recession, or even worse, a stagflation. Stagflation is a dangerous combination of inflation with stunted growth, which results in prices rising faster than economic growth. The major counterparts in the economy are contributing to a worsening fiscal situation.
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Posted: Wed Aug 26, 2009 5:48 am
Stocks and Market Places By Mitsuko Watson
Stocks are what investors and business use to grow and become bigger, this can be very beneficial as it creates competition which helps to give an income to our economy. Many times it is the investors who buy stocks that affect how well the company does. However if more people are buying and things become to mass produced the amount of money will be short supplied and thus causing a recession.
During this time stocks begin to fall, as products lay in ware houses, with no one to buy them they begin to raise the prices, this causes inflation and with inflated prices stocks begin to rise and then fall steadily, as more and more people begin loosing jobs, this causes a recession and eventually, a depression.
However if people are able to pump money back into the economy eventually they can break free and start running smoothly, hence why war is somtimes good. But in most cases it is often over production, war or greed that leads to a downfall of a golden Era.
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