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San Fidel, New Mexico Auto Repair Shops

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San Fidel, NM Car Consumer Discussions

Re: $55 oil equals less than $2 gas [andre1969]
by gagrice on Wed Nov 12 09:16:05 PST 2008
Well, at one point, October 17 I think it was, my retirement portfolio had lost almost half, compared to its peak barely a year before. As of yesterday my Fidelity 401K is down 44% from the peak a year ago. I was going through my contributions and it looks like the current value is just about what my employer and myself put into the 401K. I would expect it to go back up in a couple years if the economy turns around. I did not see any GM or Ford stock in my Mutual Funds. Interestingly the Canadian Fund has lost more that the Low Price US stock Fund. I guess the price of oil has had an impact on Canada already.
Re: now they want $50 billion!! [nippononly]
by gagrice on Fri Nov 07 09:10:53 PST 2008
Giving all these automakers billions of taxpayer dollars is the equivalent of flushing them down the toilet. I agree with you wholeheartedly. I am not sure that any of the bailout bill is going to help the average US citizen. Wall Street does not seem to think it will. So kiss a large part of your 401K goodbye. If it was like mine much of the inflation was built on the subprime bubble. I think the bottom has been hit several times over the last 2 months and it rebounds. Much of that is to generate profits. I just hope my Fidelity managers are good at what they do. When they originally put that $25 billion figure out there for the Big 3 it was to upgrade factories and build more efficient cars. Now they want to protect the retirees. Did we protect all the retirees that got screwed at Enron and the other companies that failed? Why are the autoworker retirees more important than the rest of US?
Re: Reasoning of the Big 3 Executives? [andre1969]
by gagrice on Thu Sep 18 17:35:20 PDT 2008
I wonder if Uncle Sam will kick in a few bucks to bring my 401K back up to what it was. I'm down about $40k in the last few months. Funny how the Feds like to bail out everyone except the people that pay the taxes. I should have switched most of it to a MM at Fidelity when I saw this coming. As long as the Teamsters and SS checks keep coming in the 401K is not too important.
Re: UAW CAP [dallasdude1]
by gagrice on Mon Jul 14 14:57:50 PDT 2008
Paying less or paying later? I think we both know that once paid to Uncle Sam it is gone for EVER. At least that cut was more money I could afford to put into my 401K before I retired. Not that it did much good as the current economy has taken most of the gains from my Fidelity accounts. I happen to believe that the government has more than enough to do what they are supposed to be doing. No President since Ike has paid back ONE PENNY of the National Debt. It has gone up during every Presidency since Ike. So give it to me and I will save for myself thank you. Speaking of Unions mine has a very well run retirement fund. We did not let the International touch our fund.
Re: more trouble for toyota [punkr77]
by gagrice on Wed Apr 04 09:36:01 PDT 2007
If there is a problem with the 401k, it's that many people who rely on them for their retirement don't bother to take a few hours to educate themselves on how they work and what options they have, relying instead on HR people or 401k administrators to reccomend something. This is very true. We were under the NTCA 401K. At the beginning they invested in a variety of Fidelity Mutual Funds. When we were given the opportunity to move our money around we all did better than the NTCA folks. My 401K is doing very well. I have a big share in a fund that is consistent at 17% over the last 10 years. That is fair gain in my book. I will not take any out until forced at 70 to do so as my retirement from the Union is more than enough to live comfortably. I wish my children had as bright a future retirement as I have. Companies like Toyota have not benefited the American worker in a positive way. They have only slightly upgraded people from a service industry job. When you have better medical on welfare or in jail, than working something is wrong with society.
Re: more trouble for toyota [grbeck]
by gagrice on Wed Apr 04 07:48:37 PDT 2007
Good information. My question is How much does Toyota match in their workers 401K plan? Is that 401K plan under the control of the worker or Toyota? My 401K was a 3% matching plus the company paid $6 per hour into our Union retirement. I have full control of my Fidelity 401K. If Toyota would match 6-10% of the employees contribution it would be a fair pension plan. If the employee has full control, unlike the Enron rip-off, that would be good. Any Toyota employees care to let us know how Toyota treats you? So far none have spoken up that I have read. Probably fear of reprisal.

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