der Krise werden das langfristige Wachstum stärken. Aktienkäufer sollten sich darauf einstellen und jetzt erst recht vom Zocker, der schon immer sein Geld verspielt hat, zum Anleger mutieren. Denn langfristig gilt im Groben immer noch die alte Weisheit von Kostolany: Aktien kaufen, Schlaftabletten nehmen, aufwachen und reich sein. Das gilt für alle, die sich einen solchen Schlaf erlauben können, z.B. einen jungen Rurüp-Sparer, der noch viele Jahre zeit hat. Da wir zehn schlechte Jahre hinter uns haben, sind die Chancen jetzt besonders gut, denn von letzten 100 20-Jahresperioden haben nur in ca. 15% der Fälle die Renten die Aktien geschlagen. Und bei 30 Jahren kommt so ein Fall gar nicht vor.
Monday, November 23, 2009 Latest Procurement News Posted: Monday, November 23, 2009, 9:29AM
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KNOWLEDGE MANAGEMENT TAGS "Supply Chain Management"
CBI predicts recession will remodel supply chains and finance The impact of the recession will be felt "well into the next decade" as firms revaluate core processes including commercial models, supply chains and finance, business leaders predict.
Launching its report "The Shape of Business - The Next 10 Years", the UK Confederation of British Industry (CBI) said that the recession and credit crunch had become the "catalysts for a new era".
The report notes that businesses do not anticipate credit terms falling back to pre-crunch levels and, having become wary of higher debt levels, firms will look to alternatives to debt-driven growth.
Companies are expected to reorganise and re-examine their approach to working with partners - from suppliers to universities, and even competitors, according to the study. It predicts that ongoing concerns over a 'domino effect' of supply chain failures and issues around trade credit insurance will force firms to forge more collaborative supplier relationships.
Additionally the study expects sustainability and ethics will become more integrated into the business model. Another key development, the CBI predicts, will be the evolution of a more flexible workforce assisted by developments in technology and training, and building on the spirit of collaboration between employers and staff which has grown over the recession. For some firms that might mean a smaller core workforce and a larger 'flexiforce'.
Richard Lambert, CBI director general, said: "We may be at the start of a new era for businesses, in which attitudes to finance and to corporate leadership are changed for a generation by the shock of the past two years.
"What we now need is a more balanced, less risky pathway to growth - one in which the short-term returns may be lower, but the long-term rewards for management success will be a lot more sustainable and secure. There are important questions around how businesses are going to finance growth and investment in the future. And in a more collaborative, less transactional world, closer relationships with customers, suppliers, employees and shareholders look like becoming the new norm." |