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Despite crisis, we will survive

October 6, 2008

Considering how quickly things are changing on the economic front, it wouldn’t surprise me if an amended version of the bailout bill is passed by the time you read this.
After all, in a matter of days we went from hearing about how sound the economy was, to listening to the crash of the Dow Jones Industrial Average as it plunged a whopping 777 points after the House failed to pass the initial bailout package.
But since we’re all friends here, let me ask: Was anybody really surprised by this latest meltdown?
For the past few years, I’ve heard more than one economist warn that with our loose-as-a-goose lending practices we were not only playing with fire, but were also running a real risk of having that house of cards go up in flames. But there was money to be made — lots of it. Financiers only cared about flames when they lit $50 bills to light their expensive cigars.
I knew our collective goose was cooked the day I heard a large mortgage lender brag about freely giving out Ninja loans. In case you missed that one, a Ninja loan is given to a prospective home buyer with virtually no income, no job and no assets.
I guess the Ninja loan was the icing on the creative financing cake. Well, a slice of cake can be a good thing. Eating too much of it can make you sick. We ate too much, it made us sick and maybe that’s just what we needed to convince us we were out of control.
I’m not perceptive enough to know if the bailout bill will be adopted, whether $700 billion is enough to fix what’s broken, or if there is a better solution.
What I do know is that even in good times, home furnishings purchases often end up at the bottom of the consumer’s list. I also know that the economy is not likely to turn around anytime soon.
But I also know something else: Over the past few years, we’ve headed to furniture markets directly on the heels of anemic retail sales, wars, terrorist attacks, hurricanes, bankruptcies, gas shortages and massive price hikes of raw materials.
And despite those obstacles, we survived. We took many of the good tools that markets provide: great designs, good values, best practices and innovative merchandising, then brought them back to Main Street.
And we’ll do it this time, and next time and the time after that. Because that’s what we do and that’s who we are.

Posted by Ray Allegrezza on October 6, 2008 | Comments (3)

October 11, 2008
In response to: Despite crisis, we will survive
J.T. SHEALY commented:

I WONDER HOW MUCH OF THIS FINANCIAL CRISIS HAS BEEN CAUSED BY OUR INDUSTRY AND OTHERS PUSHING "NO PAYMENTS UNTIL 2 THOUSAND FOREVER"; CONSUMERS WHO GOT CAUGHT IN THIS MESS OR NEVER INTENDED TO PAY IN THE FIRST PLACE. EASY CREDIT IS A MENACE TO SOCIETY!


October 6, 2008
In response to: Despite crisis, we will survive
Lost commented:

I agree with the first poster. This cash infusion or whatever it's being referred to these days will have little to no affect in our market. We are a luxury item and those are the first to be ditched in tough economic times.


October 6, 2008
In response to: Despite crisis, we will survive
David commented:

Thanks for the vote of confidence but the reality of the ammended bill passing and today"s(10/6) market loss, credit freeze, my business and all other indicators show a situation that is worse than we are admitting. How do we weather this perfect storm.

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