Financial Crisis Understanding From the Ground Up (Part 2)

October 16, 2009 · Posted in Economic Colapse, Financial Bail out · Comments Off 

What is the relationship between the Federal Reserve and banks

Firstly, here is the quote of definition from the Federal Reserve homepage:

“What is the Federal Reserve System?

The Federal Reserve System, often referred to as the Federal Reserve or simply “the Fed,” is the central bank of the United States. It was created by Congress to provide the nation with a safer, more flexible, and more stable monetary and financial system. Over the years, its role has evolved and expanded.”

What are the Federal Reserve’s responsibilities?

Today, the Federal Reserve’s responsibilities fall into four general areas:

* conducting the nation’s monetary policy by influencing money and credit conditions in the economy in pursuit of full employment and stable prices
* supervising and regulating banking institutions to ensure the safety and soundness of the nation’s banking and financial system and to protect the credit rights of consumers Read more

The Four Corners to Building a Sustainable Business

December 3, 2008 · Posted in Financial Assistance · Comments Off 

Why does one company grow while another fails during an economic crisis? In its simplest terms, it comes down to vision, flexibility, value, and connectivity. Having had the opportunity to work in several different geographic regions this past year, I have had the pleasure of observing how successful businesses operate regardless of what they do or where they are located. While leadership and corporate culture are important, it is these four components that define a businesses success.

Vision: Vision is having a clear direction of where the business is going, with leadership and management providing a consistent message throughout the organization of what that direction is and why that path is critical to the business. Read more

How the Credit Crunch Affects Online Business

December 3, 2008 · Posted in Credit Crunch · Comments Off 

According to a report, while High Street expenses are on the downward side, there seems to be no stopping to the escalation in online shopping. Since July 2005, when unpleasant weather hit Britain, spending was at its worst. But reports indicate that this year’s holiday would bring an upsurge in High Street. Looks like high street patrons are still ready for spending on luxury goods and other essentials.

Two-tier spending patterns:

Can we conclude that these spending prototypes reveal a two-tier pattern – those only just moving by and those who have considerable disposable income to spend? Read more

No Hassle Small Business Loans – Give Flip to Your Business

December 3, 2008 · Posted in Cashflow Management · Comments Off 

For entrepreneurs who are willing to give a boost to their business but faced with financial crisis, no hassle small business loan is the ideal option to overcome such situation. Anybody can apply for no hassle small business loans to avail funds without waiting for a long time and with minimal paperwork.

Lending companies approve loans for real estate business, for purchasing of equipments, research and development purpose, etc. With this loan, a borrower can avail the opportunity of loan amount at low interest rate. No restriction is imposed on the usage of the fund; hence the borrowers can use the loan amount as per his requirement. Read more

Online Gambling During the Global Financial Crisis – A Positive View

December 1, 2008 · Posted in Financial Assistance · Comments Off 

The online gambling business is to be spared during these tough economic times and will continue to grow at double digit year on year percentage rates. This statement comes from a recent study displayed to the public right before the global financial crisis hit the world stage. A prophetic study this, as weeks later the world began to exert the economic age of turbulence predicted by the wise and now retired FED chairman, Alan Greenspan.

We live in tough economic times, where a simple bubble burst or bank breakdown has strong worldwide ripple effects which shows our interconnectivity and economic frailty in this global marketplace of social paranoia, at least in the financial speculation of the human psyche. Read more