http://money.cnn.com/2011/09/12/markets/wall_street_layoffs/?cnn=yes
Poor babies. Now they are going to lose their jobs but you cannot call it a layoff.
Poor babies. Now they are going to lose their jobs but you cannot call it a layoff.
Quote from mingsphinx:
http://www.charlotteobserver.com/2011/09/02/2574344/bank-of-america-layoffs-could.html
The Journal is saying that the lay-off carnage at BofA could reach 40,000 but no matter how you look at it there are going to be a lot of bankers out of a job in the months to come. For many of these people, it is going to be a life changing experience.
âThis is something very different,â said Huw Jenkins, a former head of investment banking at UBS AG (UBSN) whoâs now a London- based managing partner at Brazilâs Banco BTG Pactual SA. âThis is a structural change. The industry is shrinking.â
Neil Brener, a psychiatrist whose patients work in Londonâs City and Canary Wharf financial districts said the stress is contributing to panic attacks, binge drinking and chest pains.
Time for the munchkin to grow up.
.Quote from mingsphinx:
http://www.reuters.com/article/idUSTRE61O48I20100225
http://m.cnbc.com/us_news/35566066?refresh=true
Someone needs to tell these people that if you are out of the Street for more than a year, you are out for life. Your hands get cold when you are no longer in the game. It is sad to still read articles about how people are hanging on to the hope of getting back on the gravy train. They really seem to believe that they are special and irreplaceable. Some have run down their savings and there are stories about how former bankers are homeless and living out of their Lexus SUVs. If only they would adapt to the new realities, they would be fine. Send the kids to a public school, move to a cheaper home, and get rid of all the toys. If they make the adjustment, some of these people will never have to work another day in their lives. Yet they insist on their upper middle class prerogatives. For them it is glam and glory or bust. I guess bust it is then.