- Joined
- 20 July 2021
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probably on the way to Hell without even a hand-basket to travel inIf true, Australia is fooked
probably on the way to Hell without even a hand-basket to travel in
so am i , i am still 95% in the marketEh, I'm a bit optimistic.
St. Jerome may be right about the soft-landing fable.
Iron ore price up more than 50% compared to the beginning of the month, so there must be some legs behind the China re-opening.
US futures are surging on the news as more signs of inflation peaking are helping fuel speculation that a pause in the Fed's hiking cycle could come soon.Inflation continuing to head downwards! 7.1%
Green shift, here we gooooo
There's that volatility, and it looks like we could be in for more of the same as the week progresses.Didn’t last long…
Pure stupidity. I'm kind of amazed the retail traders haven't run out of money to do this with yet.Interesting sell-off.
Great chart from @LizAnnSonders (Chief Investment Strategist for Schwab) on Twitter
US inflation YoY comparisons are now crazy hard. Even +0.2% MoM every month is going to have CPI at 2% by mid '23. Anything less than that could be staring down a deflationary barrel.
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Inflation swaps etc are pricing this in already.
Fed needs to back way off right now.
but can you rely on the data used to calculate that CPI print ??Just thinking back to the crazy responses this post (based purely on basic mathematics) garnered at the time, and yet, just as basic mathematics would dictate, we are tracking the red line.
YoY inflation comparisons remain crazy hard.
Even consistent +0.2% monthly prints from here are going to see CPI at 2% mid 2023.
Anything less than that...well...I will let the math speak for itself.
Just thinking back to the crazy responses this post (based purely on basic mathematics) garnered at the time, and yet, just as basic mathematics would dictate, we are tracking the red line.
YoY inflation comparisons remain crazy hard.
Even consistent +0.2% monthly prints from here are going to see CPI at 2% mid 2023.
Anything less than that...well...I will let the math speak for itself.
Question is if we're going to get the whole "Well we had 8% last year so if we have 0% this year that's still kinda 4% over the two years..."Just thinking back to the crazy responses this post (based purely on basic mathematics) garnered at the time, and yet, just as basic mathematics would dictate, we are tracking the red line.
YoY inflation comparisons remain crazy hard.
Even consistent +0.2% monthly prints from here are going to see CPI at 2% mid 2023.
Anything less than that...well...I will let the math speak for itself.
Assuming nothing else disrupts the downward trajectory...
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