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Coming to Grips With the New Normal

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Noreen Seebacher
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New reality
Noreen Seebacher   12/1/2011 7:36:03 AM
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I had this very conversation with a local business owner yesterday, who lamented the fact that even after the economy recovers many businesses will still operate as lean as they do now -- and workers too fearful of losing their jobs will work tirelessly to stay employed.

Dex
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Iron
i hear you
Dex   12/1/2011 7:59:23 AM
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I know what you're saying John. I feel I've reached a point where I just have to get the credit card out again--for both necessary things (car repairs) and extras (holiday presents).

Noreen Seebacher
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Re: i hear you
Noreen Seebacher   12/1/2011 8:01:42 AM
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That's for sure! I had a $1,000 car repair this week. But that's what happens when you keep vehicles (it has 60,000 miles on it now) instead of trading in every few years.

Drivewaygirl
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Platinum
One step forward, two steps back
Drivewaygirl   12/1/2011 8:20:52 AM
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For every slight improvement, it seems there is a steeper slide back. Retailers are still struggling (Syms, for instance) and it's even worse for mom and pops.

Tenacious
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Re: i hear you
Tenacious   12/1/2011 8:25:27 AM
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Geez. What was wrong with the car Noreen?

Noreen Seebacher
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Re: i hear you
Noreen Seebacher   12/1/2011 8:27:22 AM
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Typical stuff: brakes, rotors, wheel bearings...it's been fairly problem free so I really can't complain.

Tenacious
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Platinum
Re: i hear you
Tenacious   12/1/2011 8:29:05 AM
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It's interesting, as you mention, that we have more repairs now because we tend to keep the cars longer. But I think overall it pays off -- weigh the repair costs against the monthly payment on a new car.

John Jordan
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Re: i hear you
John Jordan   12/1/2011 10:13:31 AM
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I just put $500 for brake calibers on my Jeep Liberty, which after about 4 years has nearly 105,000 miles. Crossing my fingers and waiting till the payments expire before trading it in for a new one.

tokyogai
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Platinum
Re: i hear you
tokyogai   12/1/2011 10:15:46 AM
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Maybe it means we should change investing to reflect the new normal. Repair shops seem to be a good bet as well as makers of replacement parts.

PAW
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Iron
Re: i hear you
PAW   12/1/2011 10:44:56 AM
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As people delay purchasing new cars, repairs on their existing car are likely to increase.  That is fine as long as the repair bills are less than what would be a monthly new car payment.  It is true that car parts and repair shops do better when we keep our old cars longer.  Let's hope, for their sake, that there is not a nother "cash for clunkers" program....that will likely put them out of business.

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