About - Recruiter’s View

Sooner or later, everything in real life influences the jobs markets. So, our topics here range all over the place.

In our search to discover and share what’s really going on, we are particularly trying to answer the questions:

  • Where will jobs be created (and why?)
  • Where will jobs be destroyed (and why?)

This is my commentary on what I see and what I think it means.

People sometimes ask my opinion, because they assume a Recruiter’s activity can be a useful indicator.

And in fact, it’s true that I can pick up on changes in the business environment months ahead of the published numbers.

Understanding the implications of those changes is the trick. Daily conversations with business leaders give me the equivalent of perpetual survey results. And talking to candidates is the perfect reality check.

Ultimately, then, my evaluation is largely formed as an extension of what many, many others have been kind enough to share with me.

So, when you think I’ve got it wrong, I encourage you to tell me what you see from your side of the mountain.

We’re all trying to figure this out together.

Thanks for being a part of our effort!

-TD

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Meltdown Update

M

Carnage continues to spread throughout the financial world. Credit Suisse was six times the size of Silicon Valley.  It’s done. First Republic got $30 billion, but that’s not enough. Credit Suisse Last week, I mentioned that Credit Suisse was under attack. That may have seemed out of place, considering I was talking about How To…

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How To Control All US Banks

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Here’s a great way to seize the entire banking system.  (Don’t try this at home.) You’ll know soon if this is in operation.  You’ll see more banks collapse. As of this writing, Credit Suisse is now under attack. NOTE:  May 14 – Moody’s cut its ranking for the entire U.S. banking system from stable to…

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Inflated Expectations

I

The Federal Deposit insurance Corporation (FDIC) “protects your money in the unlikely event of a bank failure.  The standard insurance amount is $250,000 per depositor, per insured bank…” In the case of Silicon Valley Bank, 97% of all deposits (by value) were uninsured. These were deposits beyond the $250,000 cap. That Just Changed In a joint…

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Toxic Treasuries

T

Before it failed, Silicon Valley Bank had lots of cash and a low ratio of outstanding loans. Their fatal mistake:  They parked the majority of their money in US Government Bonds. (You know, the safest, most risk-free asset in the world.) SVB put $119.9 billion into low-interest, long term government bonds, like 10-year Treasury notes….

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