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Retirement Shock: Need to Find a Job After 40 Years at General Electric

Retirement Shock: Need to Find a Job After 40 Years at Gen...
grizzly thriller cruise ship stock car
  04/22/18
Take their pensions away. GE would be fine without the over...
Walnut love of her life
  04/22/18
"He rose to punch-press operator and retired in 2016, a...
Laughsome party of the first part
  04/23/18
boats aren't cheap
Domesticated Naked Weed Whacker Station
  04/23/18
This
Slippery Garnet Clown Deer Antler
  04/23/18
...
Brilliant Hilarious Stead
  04/23/18
and his house should've been paid off 10 years ago. The who...
Alcoholic University Gunner
  04/23/18
Gary Zabroski https://files.catbox.moe/mh5blh.jpeg
impertinent ceo
  04/23/18
Lol, fuck this faggot - $85k pension isn't enough?: Mr. F...
Beady-eyed violet plaza
  04/22/18
who doenst diversify their life savings in GE???
grizzly thriller cruise ship stock car
  04/22/18
Even if he "loses everything", he still gets $85k ...
Beady-eyed violet plaza
  04/22/18
If the company keeps going south than 85k could be affected....
Demanding pink native antidepressant drug
  04/23/18
the point is because GE is a diverse conglomerate you don't ...
shimmering gaming laptop
  04/23/18
Flame?
Slippery Garnet Clown Deer Antler
  04/23/18
lol what the fuck
crimson vibrant yarmulke
  04/23/18
...
grizzly thriller cruise ship stock car
  04/23/18
...
translucent travel guidebook nibblets
  04/23/18
he has a high school education and his annual pension draw i...
Wine reading party field
  04/22/18
wait what the fuck? he has a $85k pension and social securit...
Electric school
  04/22/18
He can't even afford a VIKING RIVER CRUISE, poor guy
Beady-eyed violet plaza
  04/22/18
Seems like social security alone (next year) should be enoug...
impertinent ceo
  04/23/18
no SS yet, starts at 62 no?
grizzly thriller cruise ship stock car
  04/22/18
Poor guy is scraping by on his $85,000 pension for now.
impertinent ceo
  04/23/18
...
amber medicated hairy legs
  04/23/18
fuck this boomer
vivacious impressive associate
  04/22/18
He consulted with a financial planner about selling what was...
Beady-eyed violet plaza
  04/22/18
...
Arousing zippy lodge puppy
  04/23/18
"The pensions are only 70% funded" God forbid t...
Aromatic Emerald Principal's Office Ratface
  04/23/18
these bonuses make buying your company's stock the smart cho...
Arousing zippy lodge puppy
  04/23/18
wait we have to feel bad for this GRE boomer because the div...
amber medicated hairy legs
  04/23/18
GE stock has a 3% dividend yield, so the dividends alone are...
Stimulating Gas Station
  04/23/18
RV, truck, and boat
grizzly thriller cruise ship stock car
  04/23/18
good point
amber medicated hairy legs
  04/23/18
hard to feel sorry for a high school graduate who had a guar...
Stimulating Gas Station
  04/23/18
Crazy also why not diversify either during your career or up...
Nofapping coldplay fan
  04/23/18
It’s possible he couldn’t sell.
Stimulating Gas Station
  04/23/18
Typically, there's a vesting period. Then you can sell after...
Nofapping coldplay fan
  04/23/18
agree. and it sure as fuck isn't 40 years
Arousing zippy lodge puppy
  04/23/18
need to hear many more stories like this I wonder how man...
rambunctious national
  04/23/18
fucking pensions are poison someone check my math i figure...
Arousing zippy lodge puppy
  04/23/18
i suspect his pension grows over time. also, 8 * 12 = 96
Stimulating Gas Station
  04/23/18
durr make that just under $1.4m
Arousing zippy lodge puppy
  04/23/18
4.5% would be about right if you're calculating the value to...
impertinent ceo
  04/23/18
Oh, fuck, how will I live in retirement on about $105,000 to...
impertinent ceo
  04/23/18
...
amber medicated hairy legs
  04/23/18
Especially retiring at 59.
Laughsome party of the first part
  04/23/18
Lord have mercy!
impertinent ceo
  04/23/18
Deeply unfair.
Laughsome party of the first part
  04/23/18
american boomers.... the most entitled generation the ear...
lime comical son of senegal office
  04/23/18
He earned that high school education and the right for GE's ...
impertinent ceo
  04/23/18
...
translucent travel guidebook nibblets
  04/23/18
...
Cobalt Kitty Turdskin
  04/23/18
What do the WSJ comments say?
impertinent ceo
  04/23/18
lol fuck this guy
exciting knife windowlicker
  04/23/18
It's absolutely insane how worse off boomers children are th...
Contagious Ape Dingle Berry
  04/23/18
He WORKED HARD and EARNED that pension and the right to subs...
impertinent ceo
  04/23/18
articles like these have to be meant to troll millennials
Geriatric Bossy Factory Reset Button Black Woman
  04/23/18
Cr
Cobalt Kitty Turdskin
  04/23/18
...
Self-absorbed Insanely Creepy Jewess
  04/23/18
Author looks like a millennial trolling millennials. http...
impertinent ceo
  04/23/18
lol what level norwood is that
hairless aggressive locale water buffalo
  04/23/18
Looks like about 2A.
impertinent ceo
  04/23/18
Gas all boomers.
violent theater stage degenerate
  04/23/18
...
French splenetic hell
  04/23/18
oh. mein. gott.
Dashing address
  04/23/18
i feel bad for the reduction in his stock value but LJL @ a ...
aqua multi-colored menage
  04/23/18
This is so sad. Let’s start a gofundme for him
translucent travel guidebook nibblets
  04/23/18
Lol at using this spendthrift boomer as an example when ther...
Cream kitty cat cuckold
  04/23/18


Poast new message in this thread



Reply Favorite

Date: April 22nd, 2018 11:41 PM
Author: grizzly thriller cruise ship stock car

Retirement Shock: Need to Find a Job After 40 Years at General Electric

Roughly $140 billion in GE stock-market wealth was lost in the past year, not just at Wall Street firms but among former employees who, like many small investors, long believed the company invincible

Former General Electric Co. employee Gary Zabroski, of Lynn, Mass., worked at the company 40 years, starting just a couple of years out of high school. He kept much of his savings in GE shares. KAYANA SZYMCZAK FOR THE WALL STREET JOURNAL

By Thomas Gryta

April 22, 2018 1:40 p.m. ET

220 COMMENTS

Gary Zabroski started working for General Electric Co. GE 3.93% in 1976, at an aviation factory in his hometown of Lynn, Mass. The job paid well, came with benefits and, for Mr. Zabroski, provided a career ladder for a man with a high- school education who started out cleaning toilets.

“You had a job for life if you had gotten in there,” said Mr. Zabroski, 61 years old. He rose to punch-press operator and retired in 2016, after working 40 years at the century-old plant, which roared to life during World War II and still churns out engines for jets and helicopters. He left GE with an annual pension of $85,000 and company stock valued at more than $280,000.

Retirement looked pretty good until GE shares collapsed. His shares are now worth about $110,000, prompting a late-life job hunt. “I never planned on retiring and having to go back to work,” said Mr. Zabroski, who has monthly mortgage payments and supports a partially disabled wife. “It’s kind of scary.”

The rapid unraveling of GE has wiped out roughly $140 billion in stock-market wealth in the past year, not just at big Wall Street firms but among small investors. The industrial giant is one of the most widely held U.S. stocks.

By comparison, the stock value lost by GE in the past 12 months is twice the amount that vanished when Enron Corp. collapsed in 2001—and more than the combined market capitalization erased by the bankruptcies of Lehman Brothers and General Motors during the financial crisis. Longer term, GE’s market capitalization has fallen more than $460 billion since its 2000 peak.

GE’s recent losses haven’t been caused by scandal, catastrophic economic conditions or a market meltdown. They have arisen from badly timed investments, troubles in key markets and overly rosy financial projections that together have triggered a restructuring that could break apart the company.

GE executives have said that most of the company’s businesses were doing well, despite problems of the past year, and that the company has enough cash to fund operations and the dividend. “I am keenly aware of the pain our stock performance and dividend cut have caused with investors, retirees and their families,” said John Flannery, GE’s chief executive. The company is focused on improving its performance and earning back trust, he said.

“This is a show-me moment,” Mr. Flannery said, “and the most impactful thing we can do is continue to make GE simpler and stronger. We will not let up until the job is done.”

On Friday, GE reported its latest quarterly results, which included rising profits in its aviation and health-care units and continued woes in its power unit. Mr. Flannery backed his 2018 profit targets and said the company was making progress on its turnaround efforts.

About 43% of GE shareholders are retail investors, people who own stock in their personal accounts, according to S&P Global Market Intelligence. That compares with 32% at Johnson & Johnson and 21% at Boeing Co.

Among those hard hit by GE stock losses have been company retirees, including former factory workers who took advantage of a stock-ownership plan to build their savings. For decades, the company has had a program that encourages employees to buy GE shares by offering to match 50% of worker contributions, which were taken directly from paychecks.

The fall in GE stock prices has put more of the financial burden of retirement on pensions. More than 600,000 people have pensions from GE, which is one of many employers struggling with those obligations. Pension plans sponsored by S&P Composite 1500 companies have an average funding level of 87% and a combined unfunded liability of $286 billion, according to Mercer. In the public sector, state and local governments have an aggregate unfunded liability of $1.4 trillion, according to the Pew Charitable Trusts.

With 71.4% of assets needed to cover its pension liabilities, GE is one of the worst funded large corporate pension plans in the U.S., according to an April report by consulting firm Milliman Inc. GE’s pension obligations, nearly $100 billion at the end of 2017, are underfunded by almost $30 billion.

“Their pension funded ratio is among the 10 lowest in our study, and that’s pretty significant given that they’re the fourth-largest company by asset size,” said Zorast Wadia, a consulting actuary at Milliman. The firm’s study included the 100 largest pension plans managed by publicly traded companies.

GE expects to borrow $6 billion this year to contribute to the plan. Rising interest rates, which increase the expected returns on plan assets, also will reduce the shortfall. In 2015, GE stopped supplemental health-care plans for many retirees and substituted a subsidy for private coverage. That change, plus a reduction in retiree life insurance, cut obligations by $3.3 billion.

Investors, many of them GE retirees, will gather Wednesday for the annual shareholder meeting. It will be held inside one of GE’s newest facilities, a design center near Pittsburgh that uses a form of 3-D printing to make metal parts, including ones for GE jet engines.

The annual gatherings give investors a chance to air complaints, from CEO pay to environmental pollution. This year, retirees are expected to ask whether the company can make good on its promises.

“We never thought GE would do this to us,” said John Phelps, who worked more than 40 years at GE’s silicone plant in Waterford, N.Y., which was sold in 2006. “We believed they would do their best to take care of us.”

Mr. Phelps, a former union man who runs an advocacy group for GE retirees, said many fear for their pensions and other benefits.

The ability of the company to meet all of its financial obligations has been strained in recent years; its annual dividend payment of more than $8 billion was unsustainable because the industrial divisions didn’t grow enough to offset the loss of the financial-services business that for years helped earnings.

Companies from all kinds of industries have long tapped GE for executives because of its reputation for excellence.

For workers, a job at GE was a job for life. That changed in the 1980s when the company cut layers of its workforce during a period of austerity that earned former chief executive Jack Welch the nickname “Neutron Jack.”

With the rise of the global economy at the turn of the century, the company began shifting operations and jobs overseas. By the end of 2017, about a third of GE’s 313,000 employees were based in the U.S., compared with 60% two decades ago.

Ben Marruffo worked at GE’s Morrison, Ill., appliance controls plant for 42 years until his 2008 retirement. The facility, about 130 miles west of Chicago, opened in the late 1940s and closed in 2010. GE sold its home-appliance business to Chinese company Haier Group in 2016 for $5.6 billion.

Mr. Marruffo grew up a few miles from the plant and never moved far. He was one of eight children, and five of his brothers also worked at the GE plant. His father worked at a steel mill for 40 years, and Mr. Marruffo said he remembered his father coming home with holes burned in his clothes from the molten metal. His father had a pension but didn’t get to collect for long before he died.

Ben Marruffo worked at GE’s Morrison, Ill., plant for 42 years. He retired in 2008 and lives in Rock Falls, Ill.

Ben Marruffo worked at GE’s Morrison, Ill., plant for 42 years. He retired in 2008 and lives in Rock Falls, Ill. PHOTO: JOSHUA LOTT FOR THE WALL STREET JOURNAL

Mr. Marruffo holds a 1966 photo of his GE apprentice class, where he is shown standing, second from the right.

Mr. Marruffo holds a 1966 photo of his GE apprentice class, where he is shown standing, second from the right. PHOTO: JOSHUA LOTT FOR THE WALL STREET JOURNAL

Mr. Marruffo, 71, started with GE as an apprentice, working in different engineering and manufacturing areas. Just like many business experts, he respected GE’s management. Mr. Marruffo accumulated GE stock through the company’s Savings and Security Plan. He figured the company was just about invincible, which made the fall in its stock price devastating. He sold some last year but still owns about 6,000 shares. He now regrets he didn’t sell more.

For years Mr. Marruffo didn’t pay much attention to the stock price, he said, but after watching half of his money evaporate, he checks every day. “I look at the stock market at the end of the day and wonder if it is has hit its bottom,” he said, “and how long it will take to recover what it has lost.”

He remains optimistic that Mr. Flannery can turn around GE’s fortunes. “You kind of hold your breath and hope there isn’t another shoe to drop,” he said.

GE stock has long been seen as a safe investment, with the good fortune of the 125-year-old company a reflection of the strength of the U.S. economy. Many people unconnected to GE kept the stock in their investment portfolios.

Jack Ennis, a retired New Jersey schoolteacher who is 63, began buying GE stock in 1980 when he started investing for his mother after his father died. He compared GE’s decline with such long-gone companies as RCA, Union Carbide and Allied Signal .

Mr. Ennis said he has seen GE go from “America’s trusted consumer lightbulb and appliance provider” to a “convoluted conglomerate heavily focused on finance and communications.” He blamed former chief executive Jeff Immelt, who retired last summer after 16 years at the helm, and the GE board. Including dividends, GE stock gained 8% over the Immelt years, while the S&P 500 rose 214%.

“Sadly, investor confidence is a difficult thing to win back once it’s lost,” Mr. Ennis said.

The permanently closed GE plant where retired employee Ben Marruffo once worked.

The permanently closed GE plant where retired employee Ben Marruffo once worked. PHOTO: JOSHUA LOTT FOR THE WALL STREET JOURNAL

Jack Feigh, 69, traveled for different jobs at the company—California, Kansas City, Louisville—before retiring in 2007 from the appliance division in Salt Lake City.

His parents were bakers who owned a cake shop, and Mr. Feigh recalled how self-employment left them with little more than Social Security after they retired. He was determined to do better for his wife and three children, contributing the maximum amount from his weekly paycheck to buy GE stock. He was encouraged by co-workers doing the same. Older workers he knew retired with plenty of savings.

While he was working, Mr. Feigh would use his dividends to buy more GE shares. “At the time, I didn’t think you could beat that,” he said. “The opportunity to buy more and more stock.”

Mr. Feigh retired after more than 30 years at GE. When the company’s share price tumbled in the financial crisis, he lost almost $300,000 in value.

“Employees need to think very carefully about investing their own money beyond 10% in company stock,” said Corey Rosen, founder of the National Center for Employee Ownership, a nonprofit that works with companies. “If you are looking at retirement, then diversification is a good thing.”

Mr. Marruffo holds his old GE identification card while at home in Rock Falls, Ill.

Mr. Marruffo holds his old GE identification card while at home in Rock Falls, Ill. PHOTO: JOSHUA LOTT FOR THE WALL STREET JOURNAL

In hindsight, Mr. Feigh agrees. But at the time of the financial crisis, he thought most stocks were getting battered so he might as well stick with GE. At the start of 2017, he had about $190,000 in GE stock, which is now worth about $70,000.

He consulted with a financial planner about selling what was left, but was advised to hold the stock. It was bound to go up, he said the planner told him. Mr. Feigh now doubts that it will, at least in his lifetime.

“I thought I was doing it right, but apparently I wasn’t,” he said. He hasn’t talked to his family much about the losses, he said, other than to vent that his “once-proud retirement was going up in smoke.”

Mr. Feigh depends on his pension and Social Security checks. He uses the GE dividend to pay his car insurance. He and his wife have put planned vacations on hold, including dreams of a cruise in Europe and a trip to Australia.

“The way GE’s stock is going,” he said, “we might lose it all.”

(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=3956951&forum_id=2#35897781)



Reply Favorite

Date: April 22nd, 2018 11:50 PM
Author: Walnut love of her life

Take their pensions away. GE would be fine without the overhang.

(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=3956951&forum_id=2#35897849)



Reply Favorite

Date: April 23rd, 2018 12:38 AM
Author: Laughsome party of the first part

"He rose to punch-press operator and retired in 2016, after working 40 years at the century-old plant, which roared to life during World War II and still churns out engines for jets and helicopters. He left GE with an annual pension of $85,000 and company stock valued at more than $280,000.

Retirement looked pretty good until GE shares collapsed. His shares are now worth about $110,000, prompting a late-life job hunt."

How does this make any sense at all? The NPV of an $85,000 annual pension for a 61-year-old is high enough (in the neighborhood of $1MM) that the stock value drop is hardly anything. He can't live on $85,000 a year plus $110,000 for a few more years until he can tack on Social Security and make it six figures in guaranteed income each year?! Boomers...

(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=3956951&forum_id=2#35898148)



Reply Favorite

Date: April 23rd, 2018 2:12 AM
Author: Domesticated Naked Weed Whacker Station

boats aren't cheap

(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=3956951&forum_id=2#35898464)



Reply Favorite

Date: April 23rd, 2018 9:36 AM
Author: Slippery Garnet Clown Deer Antler

This

(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=3956951&forum_id=2#35899149)



Reply Favorite

Date: April 23rd, 2018 9:38 AM
Author: Brilliant Hilarious Stead



(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=3956951&forum_id=2#35899158)



Reply Favorite

Date: April 23rd, 2018 11:24 AM
Author: Alcoholic University Gunner

and his house should've been paid off 10 years ago. The whole thing makes no sense

(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=3956951&forum_id=2#35899751)



Reply Favorite

Date: April 23rd, 2018 12:48 AM
Author: impertinent ceo

Gary Zabroski

https://files.catbox.moe/mh5blh.jpeg

(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=3956951&forum_id=2#35898189)



Reply Favorite

Date: April 22nd, 2018 11:51 PM
Author: Beady-eyed violet plaza

Lol, fuck this faggot - $85k pension isn't enough?:

Mr. Feigh depends on his pension and Social Security checks. He uses the GE dividend to pay his car insurance. He and his wife have put planned vacations on hold, including dreams of a cruise in Europe and a trip to Australia.

“The way GE’s stock is going,” he said, “we might lose it all.”

(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=3956951&forum_id=2#35897852)



Reply Favorite

Date: April 22nd, 2018 11:51 PM
Author: grizzly thriller cruise ship stock car

who doenst diversify their life savings in GE???

(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=3956951&forum_id=2#35897860)



Reply Favorite

Date: April 22nd, 2018 11:52 PM
Author: Beady-eyed violet plaza

Even if he "loses everything", he still gets $85k every year

(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=3956951&forum_id=2#35897866)



Reply Favorite

Date: April 23rd, 2018 9:14 AM
Author: Demanding pink native antidepressant drug

If the company keeps going south than 85k could be affected. But yeah, considering how poorly these boomers are doing even with their pensions let’s not think about that.

(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=3956951&forum_id=2#35899074)



Reply Favorite

Date: April 23rd, 2018 12:49 AM
Author: shimmering gaming laptop

the point is because GE is a diverse conglomerate you don't have to diversify your portfolio

(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=3956951&forum_id=2#35898195)



Reply Favorite

Date: April 23rd, 2018 9:37 AM
Author: Slippery Garnet Clown Deer Antler

Flame?

(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=3956951&forum_id=2#35899152)



Reply Favorite

Date: April 23rd, 2018 11:20 AM
Author: crimson vibrant yarmulke

lol what the fuck

(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=3956951&forum_id=2#35899721)



Reply Favorite

Date: April 23rd, 2018 11:22 AM
Author: grizzly thriller cruise ship stock car



(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=3956951&forum_id=2#35899737)



Reply Favorite

Date: April 23rd, 2018 4:44 PM
Author: translucent travel guidebook nibblets



(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=3956951&forum_id=2#35902970)



Reply Favorite

Date: April 22nd, 2018 11:51 PM
Author: Wine reading party field

he has a high school education and his annual pension draw is more than most xo posters make in salary with an advanced degree in their 30s fuck this boomer.

(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=3956951&forum_id=2#35897861)



Reply Favorite

Date: April 22nd, 2018 11:52 PM
Author: Electric school

wait what the fuck? he has a $85k pension and social security but he has to go back to work bc his GE shares dropped from 280k to 110k? lolwtf

(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=3956951&forum_id=2#35897867)



Reply Favorite

Date: April 22nd, 2018 11:53 PM
Author: Beady-eyed violet plaza

He can't even afford a VIKING RIVER CRUISE, poor guy

(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=3956951&forum_id=2#35897869)



Reply Favorite

Date: April 23rd, 2018 12:32 AM
Author: impertinent ceo

Seems like social security alone (next year) should be enough to cover it.

(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=3956951&forum_id=2#35898124)



Reply Favorite

Date: April 22nd, 2018 11:54 PM
Author: grizzly thriller cruise ship stock car

no SS yet, starts at 62 no?

(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=3956951&forum_id=2#35897886)



Reply Favorite

Date: April 23rd, 2018 4:14 PM
Author: impertinent ceo

Poor guy is scraping by on his $85,000 pension for now.

(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=3956951&forum_id=2#35902722)



Reply Favorite

Date: April 23rd, 2018 12:09 AM
Author: amber medicated hairy legs



(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=3956951&forum_id=2#35897994)



Reply Favorite

Date: April 22nd, 2018 11:53 PM
Author: vivacious impressive associate

fuck this boomer

(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=3956951&forum_id=2#35897873)



Reply Favorite

Date: April 22nd, 2018 11:56 PM
Author: Beady-eyed violet plaza

He consulted with a financial planner about selling what was left, but was advised to hold the stock. It was bound to go up, he said the planner told him.

lol, the boomers leading the boomers... how much did he pay that retard?

(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=3956951&forum_id=2#35897905)



Reply Favorite

Date: April 23rd, 2018 12:35 AM
Author: Arousing zippy lodge puppy



(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=3956951&forum_id=2#35898133)



Reply Favorite

Date: April 23rd, 2018 12:05 AM
Author: Aromatic Emerald Principal's Office Ratface

"The pensions are only 70% funded"

God forbid the janitor get only a $60k pension instead of $80k pension.

Also, fuck this noise about how GE is "bad" because they gave people a bonus for buying GE stock. He's probably still way up on his investments, and no one told him he couldn't diversify in the subsequent four decades.

(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=3956951&forum_id=2#35897966)



Reply Favorite

Date: April 23rd, 2018 12:37 AM
Author: Arousing zippy lodge puppy

these bonuses make buying your company's stock the smart choice, but as you point out

not diversifying is stupid/risky as fuck

(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=3956951&forum_id=2#35898141)



Reply Favorite

Date: April 23rd, 2018 12:10 AM
Author: amber medicated hairy legs

wait we have to feel bad for this GRE boomer because the dividends on GE stock no longer pay for his car insurance

(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=3956951&forum_id=2#35898001)



Reply Favorite

Date: April 23rd, 2018 12:12 AM
Author: Stimulating Gas Station

GE stock has a 3% dividend yield, so the dividends alone are giving him ~$3k/year. I wonder what kind of cars he's insuring for >3k/year. My car insurance on 3 cars is like $1500, and that's with maximum coverage to qualify for an umbrella.

Edit: there are taxes on dividends, but the point still stands even with 2500/year in dividends

(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=3956951&forum_id=2#35898015)



Reply Favorite

Date: April 23rd, 2018 12:14 AM
Author: grizzly thriller cruise ship stock car

RV, truck, and boat

(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=3956951&forum_id=2#35898027)



Reply Favorite

Date: April 23rd, 2018 12:15 AM
Author: amber medicated hairy legs

good point

(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=3956951&forum_id=2#35898033)



Reply Favorite

Date: April 23rd, 2018 12:11 AM
Author: Stimulating Gas Station

hard to feel sorry for a high school graduate who had a guaranteed lifetime job at GE and has an $85K pension.

That $280K is probably the equivalent of putting well under $500/year into GE stock over that period, so the implication is he basically spent his entire salary if this was his only savings.

(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=3956951&forum_id=2#35898003)



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Date: April 23rd, 2018 12:31 AM
Author: Nofapping coldplay fan

Crazy also why not diversify either during your career or upon retirement. Staying 100% ge is dumb as shit

(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=3956951&forum_id=2#35898121)



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Date: April 23rd, 2018 12:31 AM
Author: Stimulating Gas Station

It’s possible he couldn’t sell.

(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=3956951&forum_id=2#35898122)



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Date: April 23rd, 2018 12:33 AM
Author: Nofapping coldplay fan

Typically, there's a vesting period. Then you can sell afterward.

(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=3956951&forum_id=2#35898127)



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Date: April 23rd, 2018 12:38 AM
Author: Arousing zippy lodge puppy

agree. and it sure as fuck isn't 40 years

(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=3956951&forum_id=2#35898150)



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Date: April 23rd, 2018 12:25 AM
Author: rambunctious national

need to hear many more stories like this

I wonder how many times these boomers rubbed it in everyone’s face about how smart and set for life they were

(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=3956951&forum_id=2#35898085)



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Date: April 23rd, 2018 12:29 AM
Author: Arousing zippy lodge puppy

fucking pensions are poison

someone check my math

i figured 4.5% discount rate

360 payments of 8,000 or 30 years of 84,000 per year

figuring this 61 year old dipshit will live to 91

and got a net present value of just under $1.6m

is that right?

his stock value is really shit, but $1.6m is sweet

plus social security

fucking boomers



(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=3956951&forum_id=2#35898113)



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Date: April 23rd, 2018 12:30 AM
Author: Stimulating Gas Station

i suspect his pension grows over time.

also, 8 * 12 = 96

(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=3956951&forum_id=2#35898120)



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Date: April 23rd, 2018 12:33 AM
Author: Arousing zippy lodge puppy

durr

make that just under $1.4m

(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=3956951&forum_id=2#35898129)



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Date: April 23rd, 2018 12:34 AM
Author: impertinent ceo

4.5% would be about right if you're calculating the value to him. It's too low if you're calculating the amount GE needs for funding the pension. GE can take more risk than he can.

(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=3956951&forum_id=2#35898131)



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Date: April 23rd, 2018 12:38 AM
Author: impertinent ceo

Oh, fuck, how will I live in retirement on about $105,000 to $110,000 per year?

IS THERE NO JUSTICE, NO MERCY, NO HUMANITY IN THIS WORLD?!

(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=3956951&forum_id=2#35898147)



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Date: April 23rd, 2018 12:44 AM
Author: amber medicated hairy legs



(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=3956951&forum_id=2#35898169)



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Date: April 23rd, 2018 12:48 AM
Author: Laughsome party of the first part

Especially retiring at 59.

(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=3956951&forum_id=2#35898187)



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Date: April 23rd, 2018 12:49 AM
Author: impertinent ceo

Lord have mercy!

(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=3956951&forum_id=2#35898194)



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Date: April 23rd, 2018 2:20 AM
Author: Laughsome party of the first part

Deeply unfair.

(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=3956951&forum_id=2#35898475)



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Date: April 23rd, 2018 12:49 AM
Author: lime comical son of senegal office

american boomers....

the most entitled generation the earth has ever seen.

(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=3956951&forum_id=2#35898197)



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Date: April 23rd, 2018 12:52 AM
Author: impertinent ceo

He earned that high school education and the right for GE's share price to climb forever.

(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=3956951&forum_id=2#35898208)



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Date: April 23rd, 2018 4:45 PM
Author: translucent travel guidebook nibblets



(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=3956951&forum_id=2#35902975)



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Date: April 23rd, 2018 11:27 AM
Author: Cobalt Kitty Turdskin



(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=3956951&forum_id=2#35899778)



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Date: April 23rd, 2018 12:54 AM
Author: impertinent ceo

What do the WSJ comments say?

(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=3956951&forum_id=2#35898215)



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Date: April 23rd, 2018 2:51 AM
Author: exciting knife windowlicker

lol fuck this guy

(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=3956951&forum_id=2#35898532)



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Date: April 23rd, 2018 2:51 AM
Author: Contagious Ape Dingle Berry

It's absolutely insane how worse off boomers children are than their parents.

(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=3956951&forum_id=2#35898534)



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Date: April 23rd, 2018 3:35 AM
Author: impertinent ceo

He WORKED HARD and EARNED that pension and the right to subsidized, perpetually appreciating equities.

(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=3956951&forum_id=2#35898590)



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Date: April 23rd, 2018 9:06 AM
Author: Geriatric Bossy Factory Reset Button Black Woman

articles like these have to be meant to troll millennials

(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=3956951&forum_id=2#35899057)



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Date: April 23rd, 2018 11:26 AM
Author: Cobalt Kitty Turdskin

Cr

(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=3956951&forum_id=2#35899765)



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Date: April 23rd, 2018 1:23 PM
Author: Self-absorbed Insanely Creepy Jewess



(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=3956951&forum_id=2#35900934)



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Date: April 23rd, 2018 4:15 PM
Author: impertinent ceo

Author looks like a millennial trolling millennials.

https://files.catbox.moe/j978v8.jpg

(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=3956951&forum_id=2#35902739)



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Date: April 23rd, 2018 4:43 PM
Author: hairless aggressive locale water buffalo

lol what level norwood is that

(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=3956951&forum_id=2#35902962)



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Date: April 23rd, 2018 6:41 PM
Author: impertinent ceo

Looks like about 2A.

(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=3956951&forum_id=2#35903718)



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Date: April 23rd, 2018 11:24 AM
Author: violent theater stage degenerate

Gas all boomers.

(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=3956951&forum_id=2#35899755)



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Date: April 23rd, 2018 5:04 PM
Author: French splenetic hell



(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=3956951&forum_id=2#35903095)



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Date: April 23rd, 2018 2:52 PM
Author: Dashing address

oh. mein. gott.

(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=3956951&forum_id=2#35901946)



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Date: April 23rd, 2018 5:06 PM
Author: aqua multi-colored menage

i feel bad for the reduction in his stock value but LJL @ a boomer w/an $85K pension complaining about anything

(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=3956951&forum_id=2#35903109)



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Date: April 23rd, 2018 5:17 PM
Author: translucent travel guidebook nibblets

This is so sad. Let’s start a gofundme for him

(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=3956951&forum_id=2#35903164)



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Date: April 23rd, 2018 5:29 PM
Author: Cream kitty cat cuckold

Lol at using this spendthrift boomer as an example when there are many current GE employees with no pensions and GE stock in their modestly funded 401ks.

(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=3956951&forum_id=2#35903250)