60 Minutes on Oil: Did Anyone Verify Anything? [View article]
Don't forget the airlines and others who bought oil at $140 to "hedge" and are now losing their shirts.
One factor that pushed up the price of oil was big money fleeing from real estate and other investments into the next big thing. Speculators and investors are always looking for the next hot market.
Very little in this world, including the t-shirt stiched together in China, is made in just one country. Components are manufactured around the world and brought together to be assembled.
I think we agree on most of this...bearish...less manufacturing jobs in the US...middle class in deep trouble...
But we still manufacture more than anyone one the planet (measured in $ not lbs.)
"a country that doesn't manufacture anything anymore"
I'm a bear on the US ecomomy today, but why do people keep repeating this falsehood?
We are 5% of the world's people making 20% of the world's manufactured goods in dollar terms. We don't make the stuff you buy at Walmart, we make airplanes and computers and cancer fighting drugs and lots of other stuff (including Toyotas and BMW's). We make them with much less labor per dollar of goods produced than you can make a towel or a plastic toy. So many less people are employed in manufacturing, but they have the world's highest productivity. One person in a high tech automated factory can produce a lot more (in $ terms) than 100 people sitting at sewing machines.
A dying man will often sit up and have a moment of unusual strength and lucidity before he expires. And a plunging market often has some very strong days. Yes, oil prices will fall, but the "great deleveraging" will continue.
Supply and Demand 101....Just because you get a PhD, it doesn't mean you can forget the first day of school.
Prices will increase until demand shows some elasticity. When a rise in price causes a drop in demand large enough to create a net drop in revenue prices will stop going up.
Of course the reaction is delayed, and we are still waiting for the demand side of the equation to react, but it is inevitable. Then comes the price correction.
60 Minutes on Oil: Did Anyone Verify Anything? [View article]
One factor that pushed up the price of oil was big money fleeing from real estate and other investments into the next big thing. Speculators and investors are always looking for the next hot market.
Friday Outlook: Commodities, Emerging Markets [View article]
EEM moved in a 17% range yesterday.
Could anything be a sign of greater uncertainty in the markets?
These values are about as certain as the values of CDOs and CDSs, and about as likely to fall off the cliff again.
If you were leveraged 20 to 1 (like our banker friends) you would have gone from rich to insolvent and back again in one afternoon.
Ask how is it possible?
Go back and look at a few normal decades. The only example is the black swan of Oct 1987 until you get to the great depression.
Lots of money made timing the bounce in 1932 and here's your chance again. Or is this more like 1930? Still a leg down to go?
Getting Out of Today's Bear Market [View article]
I think we agree on most of this...bearish...less manufacturing jobs in the US...middle class in deep trouble...
But we still manufacture more than anyone one the planet (measured in $ not lbs.)
Getting Out of Today's Bear Market [View article]
I'm a bear on the US ecomomy today, but why do people keep repeating this falsehood?
We are 5% of the world's people making 20% of the world's manufactured goods in dollar terms. We don't make the stuff you buy at Walmart, we make airplanes and computers and cancer fighting drugs and lots of other stuff (including Toyotas and BMW's).
We make them with much less labor per dollar of goods produced than you can make a towel or a plastic toy. So many less people are employed in manufacturing, but they have the world's highest productivity. One person in a high tech automated factory can produce a lot more (in $ terms) than 100 people sitting at sewing machines.
Getting Out of Today's Bear Market [View article]
Getting Out of Today's Bear Market [View article]
Thursday Outlook: Commodities, Emerging Markets [View article]
Is Oil a Bubble? Part One [View article]
Prices will increase until demand shows some elasticity. When a rise in price causes a drop in demand large enough to create a net drop in revenue prices will stop going up.
Of course the reaction is delayed, and we are still waiting for the demand side of the equation to react, but it is inevitable. Then comes the price correction.
Timing the inevitable can be a bit tricky.