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Strategies & Market Trends : US Inflation and What To Do About It -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: John Vosilla who wrote (1176)10/10/2019 1:55:50 PM
From: RetiredNow  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 1504
 
Well, John, that has been my experience too. I grew up poor and had the luck to get a good education. That enabled me to reach far beyond my original station in life. But working your way up teaches you some pretty harsh realities, including that there is nothing in life that is free. If you are getting something for free, then either someone gave it to you from the goodness of their heart or it was stolen from them to give to you. Either way, the thing you get is coming from someone else. Socialism and Communism is the epitome of stealing from others to give to the perceived aggrieved group. It is why it is never sustainable.

Unfortunately, we're also finding out that Capitalism is not sustainable either. Although Capitalism and Democracy is the MOST aligned to human nature and has the best outcomes while they last, they never last forever, because they have flaws that allow for corruption to drive a concentration of wealth to the 1% and a capturing of the Democratic processes by wealthy people. If a country can't keep those things in balance, then the slide to Socialism becomes inevitable, as we are seeing now.

It's sad, but true. I don't see anyway to reverse it now. All I can do is complain and shake my head and the ignorance of history that is so widespread now.



To: John Vosilla who wrote (1176)10/12/2019 7:57:41 AM
From: RetiredNow  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 1504
 
Housing Market Points To Recession By Election Day

Authored by Benn Steil and Benjamin Della Rocca via The Council on Foreign Relations,

Looking back at the years preceding the 2008 financial crisis, a critical warning sign was the surging gap between the growth in home prices and household income - as can be seen in the main graphic below.



When income fails to keep pace with home prices, the latter must fall back. Falling home prices, in turn, drive down household spending by way of the so-called wealth effect—that is, consumers cut spending when their assets fall in value. As one Federal Reserve study shows, consumption falls by $2.50-5.00 for every $100 decrease in housing-market net worth.

Today, a parallel dynamic is playing out - as can readily be seen in the graphic. A similar housing-income gap began opening in 2015. In 2018, as in 2005, housing-price growth began falling rapidly, with significant price drops occurring in several major markets. As the inset figure shows, the trend-line in existing-home sales growth has also been down since 2015, tipping into negative territory at the start of last year. Similar drops have preceded nearly every recession since 1970.

If these trends continue, we should expect broad falls in home prices beginning by mid-2020, which will in turn drag down household spending against a darkening economic backdrop. Growth has been slowing, with Trump’s tariff war hitting exports. Manufacturing is contracting. Retail sales, excluding autos, have stalled. Consumer confidence is falling.

What are the best hopes for avoiding recession, then? Well, we could see a U.S.-China trade deal, which would buoy business confidence. But all signs are that this is unlikely, given Chinese insistence that structural reforms are now off the table. A so-called narrow deal, with punitive tariffs eliminated in return for greater Chinese purchases of soybeans and LNG, would amount to a total victory for Beijing, given the country’s naturally rising demand for both. So our base-case is that the trade war continues.

The Fed? Well, if we are really on the cusp of a recession it will likely take more than 175 basis points of easing to prevent it—and that is all the central bank has to play with before we’re back to the zero lower bound. At that point, applying monetary stimulus becomes considerably more challenging.

In short, then, we think Trump will be entering the election homestretch with some strong economic headwinds against him. Most notable among them will be a declining housing market.



To: John Vosilla who wrote (1176)10/13/2019 4:18:47 PM
From: RetiredNow  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 1504
 
BTW, the other shoe just dropped. The consumer is showing weakness:

player.cnbc.com



To: John Vosilla who wrote (1176)11/13/2019 6:37:33 PM
From: Rarebird  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 1504
 
Let's talk about the "real world" John. I see tremendous income inequality and surging costs for healthcare and college education, costs that have gone up immensely in regard to people's wages and so called government inflation figures.

Is it any surprise that most millennials are not able to pay back their college loans? What kind of jobs are out there that allow a young college educated person to pay back their loans? Many have given up trying to pay back their loans. Does that mean they are not hard working? Or, does it mean they were sold a bill of goods that most had no chance of being able to pay back? And how about the cost of healthcare and some drugs? It is outrageous and can bankrupt most people if they get sick without insurance? In fact, some cannot even afford insurance. Let's not bother to talk about Obamacare; that's one of the biggest farces that ever was.
I like Warren. Many of these student loans need to be forgiven. It is a permanent noose around young people's necks that will hinder them for the rest of their life and cause stress and anxiety.
NYS was wise in providing free college tuition for children of families earning under 125k a year. Even in Nevada, community college is free for all. I know you have become a bit of a hard hat lately, but giving a young person an opportunity to succeed without acquiring massive debt that most will never be able to pay back is Noble and supports equal opportunity to succeed. As far as healthcare is concerned, it is a mess. 20% of Americans cannot even afford health insurance. Do you think they are all lazy? And many others who do have health insurance, refuse to go to doctors because they cannot afford the out of pocket costs. And you think I am living in a "pure ideological bubble?" I live in the real world. I know it is best to empower people rather than give them something for free. Fact is many working class people cannot afford the surging cost of healthcare. That is fact, not living in some "textbook." When people die because they cannot afford medical treatment, that's a serious problem that must be dealt with.
As for the tremendous wealth gap, that's a big problem too. Filthy rich people should pay more, a lot more. Supply side economics is a farce and lie: it doesn't trickle down to the point of relevance.
The stock market is one big farce too. It is the playground of the wealthy. In a way, I am not complaining since I have profited from its rise. People need to pay their fair share or you will see candidates like Warren and Sanders grow in popularity in the years ahead. And I am a multi-millionaire telling you this.
Wake up!