BuckyB93
2 years ago
Buy low, sell high.
HockeyDad
2 years ago

Buy low, sell high.

BuckyB93 wrote:




Hunter Biden said that.
RayR
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2 years ago
I saw this propagandist for Bidenomics on the TV yesterday, leader of Biden's Brain Trust I guess. He's got a statistic for everything that says Bidenomics is working (funny how that works huh?), and if his lies don't work, he ducks and weaves. I wouldn't buy a used car from this clown.

WATCH: Biden’s Top Economic Advisor Gets Fact-Checked in Real Time on Gas Prices Under Joe Biden

By Cristina Laila Jul. 23, 2023 5:20 pm

Biden’s top economic advisor Jared Bernstein tried to brag about gas prices under Joe Biden and ended up getting humiliated on live TV.

Fox News Sunday host Shannon Bream interrupted Bernstein as he was bragging about gas prices.

“Okay, let’s talk about where we started. Because when [Biden] took office, it was $2.39 a gallon. Now, it’s about $3.60 a gallon, so we’re still, in less than two years in a worse place,” Bream said.

Bernstein admitted gas prices are higher now under Joe Biden.

“Yes, it depends on what your benchmark is,” Bernstein said.

More...

https://www.thegatewaypundit.com/2023/07/watch-bidens-top-economic-advisor-gets-fact-checked/ 

rfenst
2 years ago
[frypan] Stock Market Shrugs Off Recession Signals as Rally Builds

S&P 500 is trading at its highest level since April 2022 as hopes grow for a soft landing

WSJ

They point to worrying economic signals, lofty equity valuations and the possibility that the Federal Reserve continues raising interest rates or keeps them elevated longer than the market anticipates. The S&P 500, meanwhile, has advanced 19% this year even as analysts expect 2023 corporate earnings to come in flat.

“There’s not a lot of leeway for bad news right now in equities,” said Mike Mullaney, director of global markets research at

Investors are all but certain that the central bank will raise interest rates by a quarter percentage point Wednesday. Their focus is on the future: any sign of whether Fed officials expect to lift rates higher from there.

Not long ago, brutally hot inflation and the Fed’s plans to fight it made the prognosis for markets and the economy appear bleak.

Since the early 1950s, every episode of significant U.S. disinflation, each of which was driven at least partly by Fed tightening, has been accompanied by recession, according to Deutsche Bank research. That has been bad news for stocks: In recessions since the late 1940s, the S&P 500 has fallen a median of 24%, according to the bank’s research.

Last year the stock market seemed to be signaling such a contraction, with the S&P 500 sliding 25% from its high in January 2022 to its low in October.

Many investors expected more of the same at the start of 2023. Instead, stocks roared higher out of the gate. The S&P 500 emerged last month from its longest bear market since the 1940s and has now climbed 28% from its bottom. It ended Tuesday at its highest close since April 2022.

Inflation has cooled and the economy keeps motoring along. The jobs market remains robust, with the unemployment rate hitting a 53-year low earlier this year before ticking up just slightly. Americans have been spending more at retail businesses. Economists are raising estimates for gross domestic product in the second and third quarters.

“There’s an actual chance here the Fed could stick the landing,” said Dryden Pence, chief investment officer at Pence Capital Management.

Still, there are reasons for concern. The Conference Board said last week that its leading economic index fell for a 15th consecutive month, signaling slowing economic activity ahead. That is the index’s longest streak of declines since a span from the spring of 2007 through early 2009. The U.S. economy fell into a recession in December 2007 and didn’t exit until June 2009.

The bond market is flashing another warning sign. Normally, longer-term U.S. Treasurys carry higher yields than shorter-term ones, paying investors for the risk that interest rates rise or inflation accelerates. When the longer-term yields are lower, it often suggests that investors think the Fed will need to cut rates to resuscitate the economy.

The yield on the benchmark 10-year U.S. Treasury note has been lower than that of the 2-year Treasury for more than a year, the longest streak since a span ending in 1980, according to Dow Jones Market Data.

There have also been glimpses of weakening in the market for bank loans. Loan officers at U.S. banks told the Federal Reserve earlier this year that they had tightened lending standards for households and businesses and seen lower demand from borrowers. Tighter lending conditions can weigh on economic growth as firms pull back on investment and hiring and consumers have less money at their disposal.

Hans Olsen, chief investment officer at Fiduciary Trust, said he finds the stock market’s rally perplexing given the warning signs from various economic indicators. His firm sold U.S. stocks in April and is holding more cash than usual to protect against a market downturn, he said.

“When you looked at that data set, you went, hold on here, this kind of looks like a classic slowdown in an economy that eventually slides into some form of contraction,” Olsen said.

Such concerns come as the stock market is boasting rich valuations relative to history. The S&P 500 traded early this week at 19.7 times its projected earnings over the next 12 months, up from 16.8 at the end of last year and above a 10-year average of 17.7, according to FactSet.

Although there is no rule that valuations can’t stay elevated, or climb even higher, some investors worry that the high price tag makes the market more vulnerable to a pullback.

And while inflation has cooled notably, easing in June to its slowest pace in more than two years, it remains well above the Fed’s 2% target. Central bank officials may not be satisfied without lifting rates again later this year or keeping them high for an extended period. And that could have unpredictable consequences.

“Everyone’s sort of come to peace with a higher fed-funds rate,” said Katie Nixon, chief investment officer at Northern Trust Wealth Management. “I don’t think we’ve quite come to grips with what the implications of staying at that level for a prolonged period of time might mean for the economy and certainly for the markets.”
[/h]
RayR
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2 years ago
Bidenomics, just another name for socialism and its close cousin fascism, achieves the same results. It sets out on a quest to create an artificial economic and social order because it deems the natural order of capitalism to be either bad or inadequate and they deemed it bad or inadequate only because they felt that men’s interests are fundamentally antagonistic to their idea of progress.
So, the recourse is plundering the taxpayers, coercion and cronyism, the deliberate coordination of human activities by the commanding intelligence of politicians and bureaucrats.

Bidenomics: Trickle Up as Poverty Takes The Middle Class

Posted on July 27, 2023 by Helena

The News Media are going ballistic today on how great the US economy is fairing under the Bidenomics plan of trickling up. For the record, trickle up would indicate that the poverty is expanding upward and gaining momentum.

“Strong GDP is being bolstered by a boom in factory construction and investment stemming from huge pieces of subsidy- and tax credit-heavy legislation…” ~ The Hill.

Taiwan is building two semiconductor plants in the US at a cost of $40 billion – subsidized by US Taxpayers.
Intel is building a semiconductor plant in Ohio subsidized by US Taxpayers
Samsung, a Korean company, is building a semiconductor plant in Texas – subsidized
Abbott is building a nutritional powder factory in Ohio. Crickets? – subsidized
Siemens, a German Company is building and EV Charger plant in Texas – subsidized
Italy’s Enel will build a solar cell and panel factory – somewhere, sometime, undisclosed.

The demographics of all these companies is interesting roughly 70% male – all democrats – 15% Asian and 15% Hispanic. How and why are these foreign companies suddenly so interested in building factories in the US? It is all FREE!

The Inflation Reduction Act. The Act provides $369bn of tax credits for clean technologies,
The Chips and Science Act allocates $39bn in funds for semiconductor manufacturing, and an additional $24bn of manufacturing tax credits.

More...

https://helenaglass.net/2023/07/27/bidenomics-from-prosperity-to-poverty/ 

MACS
2 years ago
The Gecko says you could save 30% or more on just about everything by switching back to Trump!
RayR
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2 years ago

The Gecko says you could save 30% or more on just about everything by switching back to Trump!

MACS wrote:



Is he going to empty the swamp of the socialists and fascists? 🤨
RobertHively
a year ago

Even the stoners are starting to notice:

https://x.com/CitizenFreePres/status/1806330087991656874 

What is that around 350% inflation in two years, on a one to one comparison from the same store?
rfenst
a year ago

... What is that around 350% inflation in two years, on a one to one comparison from the same store?

RobertHively wrote:


"What Is the Inflation for Each Year?

An average rate of inflation can be calculated for each year:


In 2023, the average rate of inflation was 4.1%.
In 2022, the average rate of inflation was 8.0%.
In 2021, the average rate of inflation was 4.7%.
In 2020, the average rate of inflation was 1.2%.

3.3% The latest year-on-year inflation rate before seasonal adjustment as of May 2024.
...

How Much Has Inflation Gone Up in the Last 12 Years?
The annual average CPI was 224.939 in 2011 and 304.702 in 2023. This represents an inflation rate of 35.5% over 12 years."



Investopedia/U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics. "Historical Consumer Price Index for All Urban Consumers (CPI-U)."
RayR
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a year ago
INFLATION is THEFT

Inflation is theft | Robert Breedlove and Lex Fridman

?si=hq-NUZJxbSyXQGhs
BuckyB93
a year ago
Inflation is the reason why gas stations charge you to put air in your tires.
RayR
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a year ago

Inflation is the reason why gas stations charge you to put air in your tires.

BuckyB93 wrote:



Have you seen the price of air at gas stations these days? Outrageous!
Inflation and the inflated minimum wage are the reasons why there are no longer teenage gas jockeys to fill your tank and clean your windshield too.
BuckyB93
a year ago
It was a silly joke: inflation - inflating your tires.

Agree that paying like a buck or two to get 1 minute of time on an air compressor to put air in your tires is stupid, Just buy one of those little air compressors to plug into the cigarette lighter and use it to top off the tires. Use it to fill up an inner tube to float down the river or ride it down a snow slope. Fill up an air mattress when you go camping. We all know that underinflated tires is one of the reasons that gas is so expensive. I think a past President told us that.

Not to mention underinflated footballs. That led to a huge NFL investigation that cost people millions of dollars.

Inflation is real and it is costing us millions of dollars. Maybe I need to buy a pitchfork, some torches and picket out in front of a gas station to try to stop inflation. "LET"S BE FAIR... DON"T CHARGE FOR AIR!"
RayR
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a year ago
Biden would say charging for air is not about inflation, it's just CORPORATE GREEEED!
RobertHively
a year ago

Even the stoners are starting to notice:

https://x.com/CitizenFreePres/status/1806330087991656874 

What is that around 350% inflation in two years, on a one to one comparison from the same store?

RobertHively wrote:



So it's around a 350% cost increase in two years, on a one to one comparison from the same store.

Why does everybody seem to think it's an either/or answer?

Couldn't it be inflation combined with corporate greed?
frankj1
a year ago
no charge for air at any gas station in my town. there are a couple though that have machines that will check the pressure, no idea how much that costs cuz I don't need that product.

and it's been decades since kids pumped gas, never mind washed your windshield, checked your oil...more likely because so many of the owners switched to self serve gas pumps.
HockeyDad
a year ago
Get an airmoto. Problem solved.
ZRX1200
a year ago
35% over the last 12 years…what else has gone up in the last 12 years?
rfenst
a year ago

35% over the last 12 years…what else has gone up in the last 12 years?

ZRX1200 wrote:


My salary.
My investments.
My home.
My stocks.
My retirement portfolio.
...
How about for you?
HockeyDad
a year ago

My salary.
My investments.
My home.
My stocks.
My retirement portfolio.
...
How about for you?

rfenst wrote:



What percentage of the country doesn’t have any of those things? 40%?

That’s how being tone deaf works.
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