Spend twenty minutes per week browsing Investment Tools and you will be better informed than most financial experts!
Monday, October 19, 2020
Sunday, October 18, 2020
Saturday, October 17, 2020
I think most daily charts are up to date.
The weekly stuff should be up to date by tomorrow evening some time.
Economist: Ivory Coast was named after the product of its abundant elephants. But data published in PLoS ONE , a journal, show how much has changed since colonial days. Researchers drew on dung counts, interviews with local experts and media reports to take the first census of Ivorian elephants in a decade. The situation is dire. They estimate that there are just 225 forest elephants left in the country, a fall of 86% since 1994. Worse, they could only confirm the presence of elephants in four of 25 protected areas.
Friday, October 16, 2020
- To cheer every body up - a picture of a new record. I can already hear the blaring and screaming from the GOP next year , about the deficit - should they fail in November.
- Or, perhaps, you would prefer this one - a bit further back.
- FT: This was the week we witnessed the funeral of austerity.
- The IMF and World Bank are urging richer countries to spend their way out of the pandemic, although some developing nations continue to face cuts
- The U.S. budget deficit hit a record $3.132 trillion during fiscal 2020, more than triple the 2019 shortfall, as a result of massive coronavirus rescue spending, the U.S. Treasury said on Friday.
- The deficit more than doubled the previous record of $1.416 trillion in fiscal 2009, when the United States was battling a financial crisis.
- Median weekly earnings of the nation's 109.7 million full-time wage and salary workers were $994 in the third quarter of 2020 (not seasonally adjusted). This was 8.2 percent higher than a year earlier, compared with a gain of 1.2 percent in the CPI-U.
- Boris Johnson just told the U.K. to prepare for a no-deal Brexit.
- Japan plans to release Fukushima water into the Pacific Ocean
- The Covid-19 treatment remdesivir has no substantial effect on a patient’s chances of survival, a clinical trial by the World Health Organization has found.
- Retail sales above expectations at 1.9% - Good news on consumption at a time when many people have lost extra benefits.
The extra $600 per week in jobless benefits doubled the savings of unemployed Americans in July. However, a month after the payments ended, they burned through most of that. So, pointing out the obvious, unless new emergency funds are forthcoming, household spending will get tight. And so far, it seems not to be forthcoming.
Thursday, October 15, 2020
FT View: Joe Biden and Donald Trump have been exposed to unrelenting scrutiny. And yet neither will have as lasting an influence on US life as Amy Coney Barrett, who is cruising towards confirmation to the Supreme Court as something of an enigma..
Wednesday, October 14, 2020
Tuesday, October 13, 2020
Covid-19 Live Updates: White House Embraces ‘HerdImmunity’ Declaration (AKA cull the herd)
According to my math:
This is probably note particularly good for the Bitcoins of the world.
Bloomberg: High-end Real Estate sales jumped 42% in the third quarter from a year earlier, while sales of mid-priced homes climbed just 3% and affordable purchases declined 4%.
- In September, the Consumer Price Index for All Urban Consumers rose 0.2 percent on a seasonally adjusted basis; rising 1.4 percent over the last 12 months, not seasonally adjusted. The index for all items less food and energy rose 0.2 percent in September (SA); up 1.7 percent over the year
- Real average hourly earnings for all employees decreased 0.1 percent from August to September
Monday, October 12, 2020
- FT: UK public borrowing is set to reach £350bn this year, or 17% of gross domestic product, the highest peacetime level in more than 300 years
- Nearly half of British firms are financially vulnerable and unprepared for the future, according to Microsoft's boss Nadella.
Sunday, October 11, 2020
Bloomberg: On the same day the World Food Programme was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize for its fight against hunger, fresh numbers from the U.S. government showed that tighter crop supplies could worsen the food-inequality crisis that’s sweeping the globe.