10 year trading like a memecoin
Hedge funds according to this...
https://www.morningstar.com/news/ma...y-yields-spike-as-midnight-strikes-on-tariffs
If AAPL goes under $100. I may mortgage our house to buy. You always predict the comical worst.
Hello Mr Pot, have you met Miss Kettle?Sure if you're adding something new to the discussion that doesn't cross the line re: political as dictated by Richie and the mods. Look at Nimbers post for example, another tedious regurgitation of stuff he reads from his political go-to flacks.
Careful, you might trigger his minions.Chiner retaliates with an 84% tariff on US goods. Nice work Team Trump. Masterful, in fact. LOL.
I am not shocked. Just look at historical data under every administration since 1976. Jobs, market returns etc.This is all such a friggen bummer.
Everything about this has been handled so piss poorly. I'm a republican, and I'm friggen furious at how crappy this entire process has been.
Well, they heard buy and hold but didn’t hear the rest. You need to reduce your equity exposure as you get closer to retirement.It’s his own fault. The S&P 500 was around 19% below the peak at the time of his post and about 15% YTD. So not only does it look like his 401k is fully invested in equities, it’s concentrated in stocks with greater volatility. This level of risk concentration is way high for a 61 year old. And it’s obvious that his point is that he lost a **** ton of money at an advanced age. Boo hoo, dope.
Hard take but 100% spot on.It’s his own fault. The S&P 500 was around 19% below the peak at the time of his post and about 15% YTD. So not only does it look like his 401k is fully invested in equities, it’s concentrated in stocks with greater volatility. This level of risk concentration is way high for a 61 year old. And it’s obvious that his point is that he lost a **** ton of money at an advanced age. Boo hoo, dope.
+1It’s his own fault. The S&P 500 was around 19% below the peak at the time of his post and about 15% YTD. So not only does it look like his 401k is fully invested in equities, it’s concentrated in stocks with greater volatility. This level of risk concentration is way high for a 61 year old. And it’s obvious that his point is that he lost a **** ton of money at an advanced age. Boo hoo, dope.
My younger brother fully committed his cash into the market since he expected results to be the same as the first term, big supporter but now not so much. Luckily, he brought an annuity for his retirement before all this. There’s millions like him. He’ll just have to wait 6-8 years to get back where he started.It’s his own fault. The S&P 500 was around 19% below the peak at the time of his post and about 15% YTD. So not only does it look like his 401k is fully invested in equities, it’s concentrated in stocks with greater volatility. This level of risk concentration is way high for a 61 year old. And it’s obvious that his point is that he lost a **** ton of money at an advanced age. Boo hoo, dope.
Nothing shocking and I mentioned it above. "Not going to be the low cost manufacturing center for low cost goods" isn't earth shattering. If anything it can move from one place in the world to another but it isn't coming back here."we are not going to make sneakers in the US, we have 4% unemployment".
And there it is. Up next, semiconductors.This will impact many on this board.
And there it is. Up next, semiconductors.
Here’s an approach that actually isn’t insanely stupid.
Ya nothing shocking, but seems to be missed by some. A trade deficit is not necessarily a bad thing. A sign of strength in our case.Nothing shocking and I mentioned it above. "Not going to be the low cost manufacturing center for low cost goods" isn't earth shattering. If anything it can move from one place in the world to another but it isn't coming back here.
Maybe, but the fabs are already being built, they just take forever. So I don't think those tariffs would have the same effect.And there it is. Up next, semiconductors.
Let's be honest. The trade deficit is a problem with essentially no consequences.Ya nothing shocking, but seems to be missed by some. A trade deficit is not necessarily a bad thing. A sign of strength in our case.
He thought Mexico is where it should go.
No a 10% tariff is not a 10% tax increase on US citizens.Just realize that a 10 % across the board Tariff is a 10 % across the board tax increase on US citizens and it's a regressive tax that hits low income folks harder.
I'm sure that Twitler will balance that in his tax policy LOL.
GLD bizatch.And there it is. Up next, semiconductors.
This is one area where I fully support us cutting China out of the supply chain entirely. Our entire drug industry is completely reliant on China, whether the drug itself is produced there or we source a production input from there.This will impact many on this board.
If you want to go there, we only need to go back to the '90s to understand how the China trade problems started.I am not shocked. Just look at historical data under every administration since 1976. Jobs, market returns etc.
Didn't Powell start slowing QT and say it will end by mid-year? Next step is QE. Let's go!!!!!!!Wow, just saw two words that surprised me, Quantitative Easing.
Trade deficits on their own are not a problem!! Basic economy 101. They don't increase budget deficits. High tariffs will reduce consumer consumption, reducing sales tax revenue, slowing the growth of companies (especially small businesses), reducing GDP, increasing unemployment and leading to a recession, at the very minimum.Let's be honest. The trade deficit is a problem with essentially no consequences.
"They found only a small increase in prices on goods subject to tariffs, suggesting that retailers absorbed much of the cost. Absorption by retailers and wholesalers would mean that the tariffs function as a tax on businesses."No a 10% tariff is not a 10% tax increase on US citizens.
Tariffs Push Up Costs. But Not Always Inflation. Who pays: consumers or business?
What’s uncertain is who ultimately pays those higher prices: consumers or businesses. The answer will also determine the impact on inflation.
“It’s a tax. Somebody has to pay it. It’s a question of who,” said Katheryn Russ, an economics professor at the University of California, Davis. “It’s been really hard for economists to say definitively how much of the cost of the tariffs is going to translate into higher end-retail prices.
A 2019 paper from a group of economists—including Gita Gopinath, now a top official at the International Monetary Fund, and Brent Neiman, now a senior official at the Treasury Department—looked at how retailers responded to the tariffs. They found only a small increase in prices on goods subject to tariffs, suggesting that retailers absorbed much of the cost. Absorption by retailers and wholesalers would mean that the tariffs function as a tax on businesses.
“That’s a complicated question,” said Blake Harden, the vice president for international trade at the Retail Industry Leaders Association. “The way that costs are factored in from something like a tariff hike is going to be different depending on the company, their margins, the products, how diversified they are.”
Tariff increases did not cause inflation, and their removal would undermine domestic supply chains
- The timing of the tariffs clearly shows no correlation with inflation and eliminating tariffs could not plausibly restrain it. The bulk of the tariffs were in place before 2020, yet inflation only began accelerating in March 2021. Clearly, inflation was driven by many sources besides tariffs.
- In theory, tariffs do not need to have caused inflation for their removal to help restrain it. In practice, however, the size of the tariffs introduced after 2016 are simply insufficient for their removal to make a dent in current inflation. A top-down estimate that compares tariff revenue (a good proxy for the upper bound on price effects) with personal consumption expenditures shows that removing all 2016 tariffs would lead to a one-time, 0.3-percentage-point reduction in consumer prices.
Are Tariffs Always Inflationary?
+1Trade deficits on their own are not a problem!! Basic economy 101. They don't increase budget deficits. High tariffs will reduce consumer consumption, reducing sales tax revenue, slowing the growth of companies (especially small businesses), reducing GDP, increasing unemployment and leading to a recession, at the very minimum.
OK , go do your own study then. F/X also absorbs some tariffs costs btw. Bottom line it's not 1:1."They found only a small increase in prices on goods subject to tariffs, suggesting that retailers absorbed much of the cost. Absorption by retailers and wholesalers would mean that the tariffs function as a tax on businesses."
I find that absurd. Retailers won't even absorb credit card charges and add 2-3% to consumer costs if they use a CC.