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I was talking about the US though and my point was that it was not in deflation.
If we are talking about Australia, then it is doing poorly compared to the US. You should look at NZ though. I don't think they realise how bad their economy is right now. NZ is falling apart while their stocks make new highs. Not sure what is going on in that strange little country.
Thanks Valued, not really aware of NZ, an opportunity to short there in your opinion?
I was talking about the US though and my point was that it was not in deflation.
Both the velocity of money and money multiplier for the US continue to decline, the credit economy is deflating, at least when measured relative to productivity or the monetary base. Examination of the evidence shows both private corporate and domestic households have crash their living standard while the public sector has attempted to take up the slack. So, once again, not really sure what your evidence is.
As for central banks supporting markets with rate cuts, not really sure why people keep bringing this up as if it was an evidence based fact that everyone knows. In reality, markets tanked in 2008 as rates went to all time lows and the Nikkei has been crap for decades despite essentially 0% rates from the BoJ.
You are correct on the velocity of money and credit. Living standards are lower but sometimes the economy can do well even if the poor are living in slums, unfortunately a fact of life for the US.
If you look at things like retail sales, production, jobs growth and housing, they are doing pretty well (housing isn't as good as what it could be, but it's ok).
The strength of its inflation is being underestimated significantly too, at least by retail traders.
The difference is just how we judge the state of the economy. I judge the state of the US economy relative to other major economies and I judge it on lagging indicators relative to previous short term performance over a year . I don't consider the indicators relative to pre GFC, I think you need to judge trends in the economy using lagging indicators relative to recent performance. I only consider month on month performance to establish trends rather than year on year performance. The reason is I don't plan to buy and hold for years. I plan to trade anywhere from a few days up to a few months.
The main reason I don't judge the economy up against the pre-GFC economy is so I am not comparing an economy that has been recovering from a large financial crisis to the height of the boom prior to the collapse. I think by that metric you would never be happy with the economy until we are at the height of the next boom.
NZ is falling apart while their stocks make new highs. Not sure what is going on in that strange little country.
I was surprised to learn that New Zealand's average wealth per adult is the second highest in the world, behind Switzerland. Based on household assets. According to Credit Suisse's Global Wealth Report 2015. Australia came in third. The US came in fourth.
One would be "happy" merely to see metrics which match the post 1971 non-recession average, let's start there.
US unemployment is higher than the 5% that is being reported. However, they are doing very well compared to everyone else.
I think the possibility of a fed rate hike is even higher than the market thinks it is right now. Unless the China data is bad (and it's not out yet), in my opinion it's practically guaranteed they would raise rates. Something bad needs to happen at this point for them not to do it.
So Oz dollar down by the end of this calendar year Deep State?
yes I did mean vs USD..i understand you believe the fed will rise its rate in dec so I would assume the aud will fall against the USD, and any hint of panic in emerging countries could reinforce the feelingPresumably you mean vs USD. I have no signal on that call.
yes I did mean vs USD..i understand you believe the fed will rise its rate in dec so I would assume the aud will fall against the USD, and any hint of panic in emerging countries could reinforce the feeling
(yes I know assumption and past history not indicative of future)
I will probably keep my high exposure to usd till february if the fed starts raising, unsure about gold;
Gold in AUD is a strange beast in that context.
My main focus lately is return of capital not return from capital but that is the reflection of my pessimistic nature
no you did not, but you stated yesterday evening all the reason why "it is ridiculous to have a real cash rate of around -2%." Your points are solids and I just think the fed could raise even if i believe it missed the point a long time ago and may go in reverse early next year .Did I say that I, personally as opposed to market pricing, was expecting a Dec lift-off somewhere? I don't think I have expressed that view one way or another.
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