I live in the USA and I am concerned about the future. I created this blog to share my thoughts on the economy and anything else that might catch my attention.
Sunday Night Futures
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Weekend:
• Schedule for Week of November 24, 2024
Monday:
• At 8:30 AM ET, *Chicago Fed National Activity Index* for October. This is
a composite index of ...
Dr. Strange Move or How I Learned to Love the Bill
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After a couple of years of disinflation, the Fed changed directions and
started lowering rates. By most measures, the economy had been humming
along near a...
NVIDIA Revisited
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On August 26, 2023, 5 days before it a new closing hi at 493.55, I wrote a
critical post about NVDA - the stock, not the company. After that, the
stoc...
Stay away from popular tech stocks, part II
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Last August, I wrote a blog post arguing that largest technology and
internet companies -- Amazon, Apple, Facebook, Google, Microsoft -- would
never grow i...
Updating the HF Indicators
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I posted this over on Seeking Alpha.
Not much good seems to be happening, and I am concerned about the low pace
of construction and a likely end to the sho...
Yes, Well, It's Still a Friday Night
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I doubt anyone is still reading the old stuff, but I have a quiet Friday
night and figured, why not a Friday Night Rock Blog?
I found this one recently (...
I do not think we will ever return to the median trend line. That said, it does take more oil for people to commute to work. If employment picks up, it is technically possible I suppose.
Click to enlarge.
Perhaps Bernanke's printing press can create full employment while simultaneously driving up the price of oil? Wouldn't that be a miracle!
That brings us to the tribute. I do not think China will ever consume 2 barrels of oil per capita per month. Ever! That can mean only one thing. America! We won!
Warning: The following video contains some profanity but profanity (and gallows humor) is just what this tribute deserves.
Mark, this also reminded me of a post that I read from one of your sidebar Blog List:
"No Vehicles Please. We're Echo Boomers."
http://tinyurl.com/3tqcy3v
From what I have observed this seems to be on the money. The kids I see nowadays don't seem to be ate up with the car bug like my generation was. They seem content to play with their electronics for the most part and when/if they do buy a car it's usually a high gas mileage econobox.
So you may be right, we may not make it back up to that line, especially if our future generations don't see the automobile as their ticket to freedom and the open road like my generation and the ones before did.
From what I have observed this seems to be on the money. The kids I see nowadays don't seem to be ate up with the car bug like my generation was. They seem content to play with their electronics for the most part...
I was caught up in it once but...
My 1996 Camry has just 82,000 miles on it. That's just 5,500 miles per year. My current pace is roughly 2,000 miles per year.
I'm always looking for ways to drive less in real life. Virtual reality works for me and it will work better and better as we head into the future no doubt. Go figure.
Of course, this has huge implications for our country's many strip malls and restaurants (assuming the kids of today stay home as much as I do).
That said, some experts seem to think a billion Chinese will share our middle class American lifestyle and love affair with the automobile. They go way out on the limb if basic math is factored in.
And yeah, decade ago at sub $20/barrel who would notice it? Most folks be spending that much on hookers and booze anyway. At $100/barrel, well that's cuttin' into rent money for a lot of people.
Keep in mind that those 2 barrels are consumed by our country as a whole. I'm simply dividing the total amount used by the number of people (and/or employed).
Each delivery truck sending you a package from Amazon.com uses some oil on your behalf. Each delivery sent to restock shelves at your local grocery store uses some oil on your behalf. Each...
You get the idea. It all adds up.
And yeah, $200 per month is a decent chunk of rent money. ;)
10 comments:
Note how the consumption per capita and consumption per employed has been falling lately.
That's probably not a good sign if 2007 is any indicator.
...or 2001 is any indicator
...or 1990 is any incicator
...or 1981 is any indicator
Note the falloff in oil demand in the charts of this post and compare them to the business cycle contractions found in the following link.
NBER: US Business Cycle Expansions and Contractions
Mark, this also reminded me of a post that I read from one of your sidebar Blog List:
"No Vehicles Please. We're Echo Boomers."
http://tinyurl.com/3tqcy3v
From what I have observed this seems to be on the money.
The kids I see nowadays don't seem to be ate up with the car bug like my generation was.
They seem content to play with their electronics for the most part and when/if they do buy a car it's usually a high gas mileage econobox.
So you may be right, we may not make it back up to that line, especially if our future generations don't see the automobile as their ticket to freedom and the open road like my generation and the ones before did.
I do not think China will ever consume 2 barrels of oil per capita per month. Ever!
1.3B people x 2bpm = ~88Mbpd
That's every barrel in the world and then some.
Yeah, really going out on a limb there. ;-)
watchtower,
From what I have observed this seems to be on the money. The kids I see nowadays don't seem to be ate up with the car bug like my generation was.
They seem content to play with their electronics for the most part...
I was caught up in it once but...
My 1996 Camry has just 82,000 miles on it. That's just 5,500 miles per year. My current pace is roughly 2,000 miles per year.
I'm always looking for ways to drive less in real life. Virtual reality works for me and it will work better and better as we head into the future no doubt. Go figure.
Of course, this has huge implications for our country's many strip malls and restaurants (assuming the kids of today stay home as much as I do).
tj and the bear,
Yeah, really going out on a limb there. ;-)
I try, lol.
That said, some experts seem to think a billion Chinese will share our middle class American lifestyle and love affair with the automobile. They go way out on the limb if basic math is factored in.
Wow, 2 barrels a person? I never knew.
And yeah, decade ago at sub $20/barrel who would notice it? Most folks be spending that much on hookers and booze anyway. At $100/barrel, well that's cuttin' into rent money for a lot of people.
AllanF,
Keep in mind that those 2 barrels are consumed by our country as a whole. I'm simply dividing the total amount used by the number of people (and/or employed).
Each delivery truck sending you a package from Amazon.com uses some oil on your behalf. Each delivery sent to restock shelves at your local grocery store uses some oil on your behalf. Each...
You get the idea. It all adds up.
And yeah, $200 per month is a decent chunk of rent money. ;)
The video in your post made me think of this song by David Bowie:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FEypM_BRe5Y
mab,
I'm afraid I can't help it.
I hear that.
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