Posted on 04/21/2010 5:04:59 AM PDT by expat_panama
The inflation is there and for these experts it seems to be hidden or they are in denial. A website I visit has a $45 Emergency meal plan posted and now that plan has been price corrected to a little over $70 for the exact same foods. The menu plan is not anything at all fancy. Lots of bean, tuna, peas etc.
Gas is already approaching $3@gallon here in my area and suspect for some is already more than that.
My budget has been tight for the past year and prices are forcing me to look for other work to keep my head above water.
I am very worried about the financial events 6 months from now. All these new taxes on the horizon for who knows what new causes/crisis.
I don't think the experts see it yet, because they don't feel the effects yet.
There is no industrial base and the energy keeps going up with more taxes on the horizon,That guy is deaf and blind!
This will be a concern going forward. Already we’re seeing the “miles driven” stats from the DOT is down in the last two months. Here’s last month’s report:
http://www.fhwa.dot.gov/ohim/tvtw/10febtvt/10febtvt.pdf
and some more for January:
http://www.fhwa.dot.gov/ohim/tvtw/10jantvt/index.cfm
I like to use three months’ data before calling anything like a trend, but it appears to me that people are noticing that fuel prices are going up. I can tell you that diesel has gone up very rapidly here in the west - I used to be able to find #2 on-road fuel for only $2.40 +/- as recently as last October. Now... it is over $3.00 and climbing fast. Over $3.00 and the truckers start to notice it very quickly.
the source for this is The Asia Times. I am sure from an Asian perspective this does look like a robust V-shaped recovery, as American businesses are trying to offshore jobs as fast as they possibly can to escape crushing Obama taxes and regulations.
Americas Economic Recovery Is a Rotten Sham
"The economic "recovery" we are now witnessing is based on theft, greed and deceit. It's a giant rip-off, a rotten sham. In this sleazy imitation of a free market economy, liars, cheats and deadbeats are the ones getting rewarded."
I am sure that this situation is much worse than the last one (in 2002) . But we can still look back at the crash of 2007-2009. It was only slow economic growth and fear of banks closing that kept the dollar from crashing the past year or so. But anything that looks like a recovery will cause increases in food, energy and raw material prices to skyrocket threatening the recovery (ala 2007-2008.) Raising interest rates by pulling back money will cause a crash too.
Peter Schiff was right, our elected (esp Obama) have not found the magic free lunch they promised us. But Obama just wants to get through the November elections as with that text you posted.
Don’t be to sure about that. Companies have put a lot of bad times behind them; the economy is showing many solid signs of improvement.
The consumer is in a much better place than 2 years ago.
Also many companies have taken write offs for bad debt the past 2 years. The still hold that debt; and some of it will come back on their books as earnings.
I wish I were as optimistic as you.........................
More lies. Only when almost everyone begins to say we are recovering will any downturn occur. People who invest in securities which do well on a downturn are abosolutely losing their shirts right now.
We survived Jimmy Carter and FDR (and prospered); hopefully we will survive this guy.
Many people don't give enough weight to the “crap” that has been cleaned out of the financial system; and Americans lower debt load, in my opinion.
Also company balance sheets reflect at lot of past pain and write offs. There isn't a lot left to write off going forward. Again in my opinion.
Great post, blam
and theyre happy to sit on the sidelines, borrow short and buy long risk-free paper to create profits out of nothing.
Can you show me this supposed risk-free profit trade I keep hearing about?
Borrow from the discount window, buy T-bills further out the curve.
T-bills are only up to a year.
Thanks for sharing NV - as usual - interesting stuff.
Or notes. The basic idea is you borrow short, go to the longer end of the curve.
Same deal with the TALF. The Fed is giving out money for non-recourse loans at very low rates, which the banks then lend out at the same term or longer, at much higher rates.
You want banks to borrow overnight and buy long bonds?
If you did that a year ago, anywhere on the Treasury curve, do you think you'd have a profit today?
Which bonds and how big your profit?
If the Eurocrats fumble the debt problem (I'm quoting 7-4 in favour, btw), US long debt will continue to prosper to some extent. If, however, the Euroweenies get the weaker nations' debt under control, 30-year and 10-year will be utterly destroyed. Supply and demand and all that, right?
A very good play right now is to buy June 2011 Eurodollars (that's the interest-rate strip, not Eurocurrency) and write 2 June 2011 9925 calls against each contract, intending to hold the trade until about November. On the simple assumption, with which I think you'd agree, that Helicopter Ben and his cronies will NOT push Fed Funds to 1% or higher by November, this trade should make something on the order of 40-50 basis points with an extremely low risk.
Good trading to you, m'FRiend!
Are you sure? How much did the 1 year yield on this date last year?
What was the 5 year yield on this date last year? How much is that bond (4 year now) trading for now?
What was the 10 year yield on this date last year? How much is that bond (9 year now) trading for now?
Am I the only one who noticed that yield isn't the only factor in this "risk free" trade?
Thanks for the trading tips. Your posts are always informative.
However, the Greek debt problem (and the PIIGS generally) did not manifest itself until late in 2009, so a fairer analysis in light of my comment would be to start the comparison period in November or December, in which case all of the 30-year, 10-year, and 5-year would be showing profits.
As ever, it's not only a question of WHAT to compare, but OVER WHAT PERIOD to compare.
Keep in mind, though, that -- as noted -- this situation is entirely temporary. The very minute that Euro PIIGS debt looks like it may be starting to normalise, US debt, especially the long-dated paper, is going to take a huge hit.
FReegards!
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