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.
Friday: No Major Economic Releases
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[image: Mortgage Rates] Note: Mortgage rates are from MortgageNewsDaily.com
and are for top tier scenarios.
Friday:
• At 10:00 AM ET, *University of Michig...
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 (...
The chart shows the average real GDP growth per capita over the previous decade.
Please forgive me for not jumping up and down in delight at today's "new normal" real GDP per capita growth. The annualized real GDP growth came in at 1.5% in Q2. Once you adjust for population growth, there's not a whole lot left.
What does this mean?
1. Our standard of living has been stagnating for more than a decade.
2. Old Normal -> Normal -> New Normal -> New New Normal?
The anticipation of the next normal probably helps explain why the 30-year TIPS yields just 0.41%. 30 years is a long time. Things happen.
Money is flowing too quickly upwards & out, and not enough downwards and sideways . . . debt has been the only way to keep the game going, at least since 2001.
Speaking of games, I should make a boardgame of my thesis. Call it Life 2000 or something.
"NAFTA is passed! Roll 5 or greater to keep your job each year!"
2 comments:
And yet to promote the GDP we have we've been taking on more and more debt
http://research.stlouisfed.org/fred2/graph/?g=93L
shows when the leverage events happened . . .
Money is flowing too quickly upwards & out, and not enough downwards and sideways . . . debt has been the only way to keep the game going, at least since 2001.
Speaking of games, I should make a boardgame of my thesis. Call it Life 2000 or something.
"NAFTA is passed! Roll 5 or greater to keep your job each year!"
Troy,
"NAFTA is passed! Roll 5 or greater to keep your job each year!"
Life 2000! I love it!
Be the chairman of your own board game!
Game the system before the system games you!
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