Quote:
Originally Posted by GregWeld
CNBC had a lady on today that owned a "hardware store" in the oil patch somewhere in Texas (sorry - didn't pay any attention to the details)... and she said that business was off 90% - and that they can't continue much longer at that rate.
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So, before the rapid expansion of fracking and the Eagle Ford field exploration and $100 per barrel oil what was the business model of the "hardware store"? Texas has gone through wild swings since oil was first drilled here. One year they are millionaires driving around in overalls in 1 ton pickups trying to figure out how to spend all the money the next year they are all broke and telling the hard luck stories. Meanwhile the rest of us here just work our regular boring jobs and somehow get by. Fortunately since the big bust of the 80s Texas has diversified and the oil lows do not hammer the whole state. When I was interviewing when I went to college the first time (BSME), I avoided the oil companies for that reason. And again, 8 years later, when I went back again (MSME) I was actively aggressively recruited by a few oil companies and oil tool manufacturers and did not interview with a single one.
What does this have to do with "102". Be careful pursuing the latest hot trend, there is almost always a correction looming on the horizon. Many of my peers that went into that field are now doing something else in a different field.
In my industry (semiconductor) the environment of the past few years has been surprisingly hot and the vendors are struggling to keep pace. But, they have been burned so badly in the past that they are wary about increasing capacity and cost. I know - I used to work at one of the capitol equipment manufacturers and our plant was shut down in 2003. In a way I think it is a good thing that they limit their growth. They are artificially throttling the growth and thus reduce the swings. Now semiconductor has its swings also, but it is a bit more stable and forgiving.