Showing posts with label tariffs. Show all posts
Showing posts with label tariffs. Show all posts

2019-01-11

Expect Tech To Face a 'Tough Time' in 2019 Says Mark Mobius (video)

Expect tech to face a 'tough time' in 2019: Mark Mobius

Mark Mobius of Mobius Capital Partners (domain: mobiuscapitalpartners.com) also says good news will likely emerge on the U.S.-China trade front, though it's "going to take time." CNBC International TV video above published Jan 8, 2019.


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2018-11-03

Tech Review: 1) Mobile's Future Is 5G, 2) Amazon HQ2's Front-Runners

graphic "Tech Review" ©2017 DomainMondo.com
Tech Review (TR 2018-11-03)--Domain Mondo's weekly review of tech investing news with commentary, analysis and opinion: Features • 1) Mobile's Future Is 5G, 2) Amazon HQ2's Front-Runners, 3) Investing: The Week, Investing Notes,  4) ICYMI Tech News: Apple, Baidu, Amazon, Monzo, China..

1) Mobile's Future Is 5G

5G is a new, faster network with the potential to completely transform the internet and the world.

What is 5G?

2) Amazon HQ2's Front-Runners

Amazon's search for its second headquarters, HQ2, has created a bidding war between cities and states worth billions. These kinds of tax incentives have a long history in the United States, but experts question their efficacy. Economic development experts say that wherever Amazon decides to bring its HQ2 will also bring along new businesses, skilled workers and higher real estate prices. Amazon has narrowed its list twice and is expected to deliver its decision by the end of the year.

Some locations, like Miami and Washington D.C.-area cities, have reportedly had follow-up visits from Amazon in recent months, while cities like Raleigh, N.C. have not, the Wall Street Journal has reported. Financial Times (ft.com) video above published Oct 25, 2018. CNBC.com video below published Oct 25, 2018. The shortlist of the 20 locations still in the running is at amazon.com/hq2.

UPDATE Nov 4: Amazon in late-stage talks with several cities including Crystal City, VA (Metro DC), Dallas, New York for HQ2, and may place smaller operations in runner-up cities--wsj.com.

Is Amazon HQ2 A Bad Gamble For Cities?

3) Investing
graphic: "INVESTING"  ©2017 DomainMondo.com
The Week: NASDAQ Composite +2.7% | S&P 500 Index +2.4% | DJIA +2.4%
The [U.S.] economy is in great shape with lots of jobs and more money in workers’ paychecks"--Chris Rupkey, chief economist at MUFG in New York.
"Apple is a ‘buybuybuy’ right now, and other FAANG stocks are bargains too"--MarketWatch.com Opinion, Nov 2, 2018.
Wall Street's Charging Bull
graphic of Charging Bull | DomainMondo.com
Investing Notes: End of an Era in Germany

Angela Merkel’s decision to stand down as leader of the Christian Democratic Union and not run again as chancellor in 2021 ushers in a new age in German politics. Video above published by FT.com Oct 30, 2018. See also Bill Blain: "Europe heads into a very dangerous 2019."

EU: Eurozone GDP Hits 4 Year Low, Italian Economy Flatlines, Euro Slides--zerohedge.com.

US: Jobs smash estimates with gain of 250,000, wage gains pass 3% for first time since recession--cnbc.com.
  • POLL: TRUMP Approval 51% (Nov 2, 2018). The Trump Scoreboard--Editor's note: everything looks great except the trade deficit which can be attributed to an increase in imports before the new tariffs on China come into effect in early 2019.  See also Peter Thiel Pledges to Support Trump’s 2020 Campaign--bloomberg.com.

China: China's currency slips to weakest level in 10 years against the U.S. dollar--ft.com video.

Trade: Trump, Xi upbeat on trade after phone call; U.S. targets more Chinese firms--reuters.com.

World:
4) ICYMI Tech News:
graphic: "ICYMI Tech News" ©2017 DomainMondo.com
  • Apple Store Expansion in China 'Hit Massive Brick Wall'--zerohedge.com. See also Apple $AAPL FY18 Q4 Earnings LIVE Webcast Nov 1. Apple said it will stop reporting unit sales data for its iPhone, iPad and Mac computer products--“Companies typically stop reporting metrics when the metrics are about to turn. This is not a good look for Apple”--Walter Piecyk, BTIG Research analyst. 
Editor's note: Apple's focus is on high-end premium hardware and services. The hardware products (iPhones, iPads, iMacs, etc.) come with hefty profit-margins, positioned as high-quality products, with less need for frequent replacement. Its target consumer demographic is nearing market saturation. Accordingly, I expect Apple will increasingly focus on its services and subscriptions, to reach untapped potential within its core consumer markets. "Unit sales" are therefore of decreasing importance, as long as Apple's "market share" within those hardware and services categories is maintained.
  • Baidu's fourth-quarter sales forecast misses estimates as regulation, trade fears bite--reuters.com. Also Ford and Baidu are collaborating on driverless vehicles. Ford's autonomous vehicles have been equipped with Baidu's autonomous driving system Apollo, and on-road testing is set to begin by the end of this year--cnbc.com.
  • Cloud: analyst firm Gartner.com says 10 percent of enterprises will have shut down their traditional data center by the end of 2018 -- and that's expected to rise to 80 percent by 2025.
  • U.S. Department of Justice charges two of China's intelligence officers 'and their team of hackers' in connection with IP and confidential data theft from US and French aviation companies--zdnet.com.
  • U.S. will restrict exports to China's state-owned Fujian Jinhua Integrated Circuit, as posing a national security threat, following claims by Micron Technology $MU of IP theft.--NYTimes.com. FT.com video on YouTube.com here.
  • How to secure the US electoral system: Cris Thomas, global strategy lead at IBM.com's X-Force Red, details some of the steps that can be taken to shore up the American electoral system--techrepublic.com.

-- John Poole, Editor, Domain Mondo  

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2018-10-01

Adam Tooze on 'How a Decade of Financial Crises Changed the World'


Reuters.com's Peter Thal Larsen talks to Adam Tooze, Columbia University history professor, who joins the dots from the 2008 crash to Brexit and U.S. elections. Podcast release date: 4 September 2018.

Professor Adam Tooze is author of Crashed: How a Decade of Financial Crises Changed the World.

Domain: adamtooze.com

Twitter profile: History, economics, politics, theory. Professor, Columbia University. Director of the European Institute. Born UK, raised FRG (Germany).

Twitter: @adam_tooze


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2018-09-19

Buy or Sell Stocks? Nobody Understands the Stock Market (videos)

One View: "Wall Street Is Probably Too Optimistic on Stocks, Sell Now"

"Investing Strategies - Morning Jolt" video above published by TheStreet.com Sep 18, 2018: Sell now, ask questions later?

"The Reality" according to TheStreet.com's Brian Sozzi, who is bearish, in the video above: "Within a week, two industrial powerhouses have let investors down with their profits. Investors have to start paying attention. 3M warned last week on profits amid higher commodities costs. FedEx missed earnings forecasts on Monday by a whopping 34 cents thanks to investments in higher worker wages."

Fund Managers Say: A net 24% of investors surveyed by BofA expect global growth to slow in the next year, up from net 7% in August. It marked the worst outlook on the global economy since December 2011. Editor's note: this may, in fact, be a bullish sign for buying more U.S. stocks as the large U.S. domestic market is not as dependent on exports as say, China or Germany. In that case,  Wall Street's bull market may be "where the action is" among global equity markets for the foreseeable future, and may have a lot more life left in it. U.S. stock exchanges are still getting plenty of domestic, as well as many, if not most, of the best non-domestic tech listings and IPOs, including from Europe (e.g., Spotify $SPOT) and China.

Market tops usually come when greed has fully displaced fear (which is not the case today), one reason why almost everyone, including the Federal Reserve, didn't see the 2008 crisis coming.

Around The Street: Over on Real Money, TheStreet.com's Jim Cramer tackled why nobody cares about high valuations on stocks. "What's so frustrating, what's so maddening about this market right now, though, is that valuation makes no difference whatsoever in anyone's thinking. Anyone. You get these downgrades by analysts on valuation and you just roll your eyes because, you see -- and this is really the rub -- the buyers do not care. They aren't going to stop here. They get new money in, they look at their stocks, they think their stocks are cheap and they buy more of them. It's an insanely non-rigorous virtuous circle. You want to boil down the current investment thesis? It goes like this: I buy them because they go higher and they go higher because I buy them. Could there be a more stupid or a more profitable investment strategy at this moment -- and perhaps until the end of the year? I don't know. I can't think of one," Cramer said.

Editor's note: end of the year? It could run a lot longer than that--Trump wants a trillion-dollar infrastructure program--and may get the OK from Congress next year, with help from Democrats. Remember,Trump is a real estate developer who was always very comfortable using leverage (debt).
NASDAQ Composite
Trade Wars and Tariffs? "Tariffs on another $200 billion will mean about 12% of U.S. imports have seen a tariff hike. That means an average tariff increase of only 1.6% across all imports, so tiny compared to the 1930s, when they were 20%," says Shane Oliver, chief economist at AMP Capital Investors (ampcapital.com)--Markets Shrug Off Fresh Trade Salvo | SeekingAlpha.com Sep 18, 2018.

Looking further into 2019, is Brexit: Friday, 29 March 2019. The UK economy is the fifth-largest national economy in the world measured by nominal gross domestic product (GDP), ninth-largest measured by purchasing power parity (PPP). The EU seems to be forcing UK into a "hard Brexit" which will only strengthen Trump's hand for a quick "Free and Fair" trade deal between the US and UK, which both Donald Trump and Theresa May say they want. The UK is a net importer from the EU, so the EU stands to be hurt more by a "hard Brexit" than the UK, and opening the UK's $3.028 trillion economy (GDP PPP) to U.S. goods and services will open to the U.S. a developed market 1½ times the size of Canada's (GDP PPP), and for the UK, opening the U.S. economy ($20.4 trillion) to UK goods and services, will more than replace the EU (minus UK), as a trading partner. In such a scenario, don't be surprised if Trump, ever the showman, gloats over the stupidity of Brussels and Merkel, with what one might describe as a "shock and awe" US-UK trade deal meant to embarrass and humiliate the EU overlords in Brussels. Unlike Mexico, the UK, as a US trading partner, does not present competitive problems of low wages, lax environmental rules, crime and corruption. There is no language barrier, and the financial systems of both countries are already closely linked.

Michael Lewis: Nobody Understands the Stock Market

Bloomberg.com video above published Apr 2, 2014: "Flash Boys: A Wall Street Revolt" Author Michael Lewis discusses his book, trading and the stock market on Bloomberg Television's "Market Makers."

Editor's note: unless you are a professional trader, hedge fund manager, etc., the above is a good reason why individual investors should stick with index funds, starting with VFIAX, VFINX, or the like.

On the other hand,  cryptocurrencies? Hope you got out:

-- John Poole, Editor  Domain Mondo 

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2018-07-09

Trade War Begins: Why China’s Growth Doesn’t Work For America Anymore

President Trump Announces Trade Tariffs On China Imports

BloombergQuint.com video above published Jul 6, 2018.

Trump tariffs on Chinese goods fulfill campaign promise: Peter Navarro

White House Office of Trade and Manufacturing Policy Director Peter Navarro says President Trump has given China every possible avenue to address the theft of U.S. intellectual property. Fox Business video above published Jul 6, 2018.

Trade War Begins: Why China’s Growth Doesn’t Work For America Anymore

No longer does the United States see the Chinese system of economic growth as a tolerable process, says Law Professor Raj Bhala, an expert in International Trade Law, in the video above. Raj Bhala is the inaugural Brenneisen Distinguished Professor, The University of Kansas, School of Law, and Senior Advisor to Dentons U.S. LLP.

According to Bhala, two Trump administration documents detail why Section 301 actions are necessary:

The first is a 215-page investigation report, issued on March 22 by the United States Trade Representative (USTR), summarized in the USTR’s language:
  • “China uses joint venture requirements, foreign investment restrictions, and administrative review and licensing processes to force or pressure technology transfers from American companies.”
  • “China uses discriminatory licensing processes to transfer technologies from U.S. companies to Chinese companies.”
  • “China directs and facilitates investments and acquisitions which generate large-scale technology transfer.”
  • “China conducts and supports cyber intrusions into U.S. computer networks to gain access to valuable business information.”
The second is a 35-page report, issued on June 20 by the White House Office of Trade and Manufacturing (embed below), which contends that in addition to protectionist barriers, subsidized overcapacity, and cloud computing restrictions, China seeks to “acquire key technologies and intellectual property from other countries” and “capture the emerging high-technology industries that will drive future economic growth and many advancements in the defense industry.”


A third document is April 18 testimony to Congress by Pacific Commander Admiral Philip Davidson that the CCP’s military intentions in the South China Sea threaten to “displace the U.S. as the security partner of choice for countries in the Indo-Pacific” and “prevent the United States from intervening in any regional conflict on China’s periphery”.
"… [T]he United States advocates for a free and open Indo-Pacific, supported by regional partners and allies that respect international law, freedom of navigation and overflight, and the free flow of commerce and ideas. ...[I]t is increasingly clear that China wants to shape a world aligned with its own authoritarian model and inconsistent with these principles. Through coercive diplomacy, predatory economic policies, and rapid military expansion, China is undermining the rules-based international order. We must be willing to cooperate with China where we can, while consistently and unapologetically confronting China when it engages in behavior that undermines the international order or harms U.S. interests in the region."
Bhala says that on July 6, 2018, President Trump changed the U.S. narrative on trade with China. He imposed under Section 301 of the Trade Act of 1974, a 25 percent tariff on $35 billion worth of Chinese imports into the United States, effective July 6, with more levies possible, up to $500 billion on Chinese goods, and China immediately counter-retaliated.

According to Bhala, the U.S. will no longer facilitate Chinese economic growth because the U.S. no longer believes Chinese Communist Party (CCP) led planning is good for the U.S. or the world--that the CCP’s economic behavior, not to mention military intentions, erode America’s economic vitality and thereby undermine its national security. Bhala adds:

"The European Union fought most of the rest of the world over bananas throughout the 1980s and 1990s. Canada and the United States have been whacking each other with softwood lumber since 1982 ... The prudent historical inference for businesses to draw is to re-think their models.
  • Is there exposure to imports, exports, or foreign direct investment in China?
  • What alternative sources of supply exist?
  • Are alternative sales markets appealing?
  • Are alternative production venues viable?
"Even if, perchance, hostilities cease with a truce or treaty, the re-think will prove useful. That’s because the new narrative is a testament to enduring Chinese-American tensions." Read more by Bhala here.

See also:

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2018-04-06

Jeffrey Gundlach & Wilbur Ross: Stocks, Bonds, Bitcoin, Tariffs & China

Jeffrey Gundlach On Bonds, Tariffs And Bitcoin

Gundlach: "Bitcoin is the Dot Com of our world today." CNBC.com video above published Apr 4, 2018: Jeffrey Gundlach, CEO of Doubleline Capital (Domain: doubleline.com), talks bonds, tariffs and bitcoin in an exclusive interview on CNBC's "Fast Money." See also Doubleline Funds webcast-schedule and bitcoin price.

Note also:

VIX
 VIX
The Chicago Board Options Exchange (CBOE) Volatility Index, known by its ticker symbol VIX, is a popular measure of the stock market's expectation of volatility implied by S&P 500 index options.

U.S. Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross Reacts To China's New Tariffs

CNBC.com video above published Apr 4, 2018: In an interview with CNBC, U.S. Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross says China's new tariffs do not represent a threat to the United States.

NASDAQ Composite UP 2.5% YTD:
 NASDAQ
The NASDAQ Composite (ticker symbol IXIC) is a stock market index of the common stocks and similar securities (e.g. ADRs, tracking stocks, limited partnership interests) listed on the NASDAQ stock market. Along with the Dow Jones Industrial Average (a/k/a Dow or DJIA) and S&P 500 Index, it is one of the three most-followed US stock markets' indices. The composition of the NASDAQ Composite is heavily weighted towards information technology companies.

S&P 500 Index DOWN 0.4% YTD:
 S&P 500

DJIA DOWN 0.87% YTD
 DJIA
The Dow’s (DJIA 30 stocks) decline for the year-to-date primarily comes down to 5 stocks which give a better narrative than the media of how tariff issues are affecting US equity prices: 3M; Caterpillar; Home Depot; Proctor & Gamble; Walmart.

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2018-03-24

Tech Review | Nvidia CEO On The Future of Autonomous Vehicles (video)

graphic "Tech Review" ©2017 DomainMondo.com
Tech Review (TR 2018-03-24)--Domain Mondo's weekly review of tech news with commentary, analysis and opinion: Features • 1) Nvidia CEO On The Future of Autonomous Vehicles, 2) Uber’s Self-Driving Trucks Delivering Cargo for Real Customers, 3) Investing: The Week,Investing Notes4) ICYMI Tech News.

1) The Future of Autonomous Vehicles | Nvidia CEO Full Interview

The future really is now—or at least sooner than it seems, according to Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang. Speaking at Fortune Brainstorm Tech in Las Vegas, Huang, a co-founder of Nvidia, the gaming giant turned artificial intelligence powerhouse, said the full expression of the technology is a mere decade away. NASDAQ: NVDA (domain: nvidia.com).

2) Uber’s Self-Driving Trucks Are Delivering Cargo for Real Customers

Fortune Magazine video above published Mar 6, 2018: Uber’s self-driving trucks moving consumer goods for real customers near Topock, Arizona and utilizing the Uber Freight app.

See also: Self-driving Uber car kills Arizona woman crossing street | Reuters.com: “I suspect preliminarily it appears that the Uber would likely not be at fault in this accident,”--Tempe Police Chief.

3) Investing
graphic: "INVESTING"  ©2017 DomainMondo.com
The Week: S&P 500
 S&P500 now in negative territory for 2018
 S&P500 now in negative territory for 2018
Markets got sidelined this week by Facebook's data debacle and Trump attacking all the "bad deals" other U.S. administrations made in good times--Trump may be testing the adage, "Bad deals are made in good times ... It takes bad times to be able to make good deals."--WolfStreet.com.

Trump vs. the WTO?  The U.S. has much lower tariffs on some foreign goods than other countries have on the same US-made goods. For example cars: the European Union has a 10 percent tariff on all imported cars, including those manufactured in the U.S., and China hits all foreign-made cars with 25 percent tariffs. But the U.S. only charges 2.5 percent on foreign cars imported into the U.S. market--Axios.com.

How far is Trump willing to take this? Watch Steven Mnuchin--US will consider re-entering TPP, Treasury Secretary Mnuchin says | CNBC.com 21 March 2018: "The U.S. will consider re-entry to the 12-nation trade agreement once Washington accomplishes its other trade goals, Mnuchin said."
Above left, Fed Chair deflects question about Trump's tariffs.
Above right, President Trump signs Presidential Memorandum re: China
Investing Notes:
  • Caveat Emptor: Obama-era fiduciary rule on retirement planners overturned--a federal appeals court has ruled that the Department of Labor overstepped its authority when it wrote a rule that required financial professionals, including brokers and insurance agents, to put their customers’ financial interests ahead of their own.
  • Outgoing Secretary of State Rex Tillerson says farewell | CBSnews.com: "This [Washington, D.C.] can be a very mean-spirited town," Tillerson said, to applause. "But you don't have to choose to participate in that." [Editor's note: that's one reason I cut the cord on cable TV.]
  • We don’t actually see the world as it is--"Expertise and filtering [can] work together. The better we know our subject matter, the easier it is to filter out irrelevant noise ... Clarity ... [versus] biases and beliefs, reactive emotions ...."-- cfainstitute.org.

4) ICYMI Tech News:
graphic: "ICYMI Tech News" ©2017 DomainMondo.com

-- John Poole, Editor, Domain Mondo  

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2018-03-23

Billionaire Peter Thiel on Trade & Tariffs, Bitcoin, Privacy, and Trump (video)

President Trump Signs a Presidential Memorandum Targeting China's Economic Aggression

The WhiteHouse.gov video above published Mar 22, 2018

Billionaire Peter Thiel: Innovation, Bitcoin and Politics (2018)

Interview Date:15 March 2018
Event: The Economic Club of New York

An interview with billionaire venture capitalist and co-founder Valar Ventures, Peter Thiel. In this interview with Maria Bartiromo, Thiel discusses how to create innovation and what future innovation he would invest in. He also talks about Bitcoin, privacy, trade and tariffs, and why he supports President Trump.

On privacy (starts at 30:00):
Question: I want to ask you your thoughts on privacy at a time when these technology companies are so successful, more successful and more powerful than they ever have been in terms of having so much information on all of us, you backed Hulk Hogan's successful triumph over Gawker Media and that sex tape that they resulted in a 140 million dollar judgment against Gawker forcing the media company into bankruptcy. You're a libertarian, I want to get your take on how you see the privacy issues versus this powerful position so many of these technology companies are in. I'm leaning to a question about regulation but first why was this Gawker situation so important to you?
Answer: "Well I think that I'm very proud of having supported Hulk Hogan in his in his a successful lawsuit, you know this sort of egregious [conduct], the claim that you know a pornographer pays people for sex tapes and a journalist is someone who gets to publish sex tapes without paying people that's simply an insult to journalists and that's what that is what Gawker was in effect arguing. You know there is a First Amendment we believe in, free speech, but that doesn't mean that you get to steal a sex tape made in the privacy of a bedroom and post it on the internet for everybody to see and ... of course we have a Fourth Amendment which protects you against unreasonable search and seizure not just by the government but certainly also by by private actors ... I'd seen them [Gawker] you know bully and mistreat people for you know for a long time and I thought it was going to continue ... this ongoing tortious behavior was simply going to continue and someone needed to to try to say stop ...

"This question about privacy in the digital era is something that deserves to be rethought a lot and it's not a matter of technological determinism. We often like to tell these technologically determinist stories where if you are pro privacy you are a Luddite and that privacy is an old-fashioned concept, it went out the window and it's no longer possible in the technological world.

"I don't think that's true. I think it is not always just a technological question. It's a legal question, it's a cultural, social, political question and I think that we're going to have a balance that will be, it will protect more privacy in the future. Now I do think that what Gawker did and what the big tech companies are doing is very different. I mean I think one very basic difference is if you voluntarily give the information, that's quite different from from it being sort of illegally obtained and sort of privacy violating way, but I think these things are always open to be rethought ... as a libertarian I always dislike regulation and worry the regulators will do whatever they will do in an even more ham-handed way and will make mistakes even greater than the companies ... but I would agree with you, that if they don't take these issues seriously, there is a risk they will be regulated whether that's a good thing or not. I think the threat is probably greater in Europe and again there's sort of good reasons and bad reasons. Good reasons are these privacy concerns. The bad reasons are that there are no successful [big] tech companies in Europe and they're jealous of the U.S. and ... they're punishing us, so it's sort of a combination of good and bad reasons but I think the tech industry needs to take this stuff [privacy] very seriously."

See also: Peter Thiel on Entrepreneurship, Innovation and Competition (video)

Video Segments:
0:00 Introduction 5:46 How do you see technology changing from here?
13:51 What creates innovation?
15:59 Why have you moved to L.A?
17:20 Why did you support Trump?
19:42 Policies you want to see?
21:57 Views on trade?
24:52 China?
27:15 Are you worried about a trade war?
28:35 Europe? [Editor's note: Thiel comments about U.S. (Trump) vs. China and Germany]
29:59 Thoughts on privacy of technology companies?
33:12 Should there be more regulation?
34:46 Bitcoin? 39:08 Why do you not like other Cryptocurrencies?
40:30 If its price declined, would you buy?
41:42 Thoughts on Space travel?
43:52 Growth stories today?
47:26 Are robots taking over a lot of jobs? [AI]
49:08 Can anyone beat Amazon?
51:43 Other ferocious company?
52:04 Does Trump get a second term?
55:59 Media business?

Transcript (auto-generated, unedited):

Peter Thiel's Book: Zero to One: Notes on Startups, or How to Build the Future

Peter Thiel’s Favorite Books:
  • 100 Plus: How the Coming Age of Longevity Will Change Everything, From Careers and Relationships to Family and Faith
  • Bloodlands: Europe Between Hitler and Stalin
  • Resurrection from the Underground: Feodor Dostoevsky (Studies in Violence, Mimesis, & Culture) 
  • Sir Francis Bacon: The New Atlantis

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2018-03-21

Charles Schwab: The Fed Still A Long Way From Normalizing Interest Rates

UPDATE: FOMC Live Press Conference March 21, 2018
LIVE 2:30 pm EDT March 21, 2018

Federal Reserve Monetary Policy:

3/21/2018 Federal Reserve Board and Federal Open Market Committee release economic projections from the March 20-21 FOMC meeting

3/21/2018 Federal Reserve issues FOMC statement (0.25 increase), excerpt:
"In view of realized and expected labor market conditions and inflation, the Committee decided to raise the target range for the federal funds rate to 1-1/2 to 1-3/4 percent. The stance of monetary policy remains accommodative, thereby supporting strong labor market conditions and a sustained return to 2 percent inflation."
The Fed is still a long way from normalizing interest rates says Charles Schwab:

FoxBusiness.com video above published Mar 16, 2018:  Charles Schwab Corporation founder Charles Schwab discusses the Fed, President Trump’s tariffs plan and the impact on the U.S. labor force.

NASDAQ Composite UP +6.68% this year (since close of trading in 2017).
The Fed | 2018 Meeting calendars and information:
March 20-21* -- March 21 at 2:30 p.m. EDT:  FOMC Meeting Press Conference
May 1-2
June 12-13*
Jul/Aug 31-1
September 25-26*
November 7-8
December 18-19*
*Meeting associated with a Summary of Economic Projections and a press conference by the Chair.

Chairman Powell Introduction Video

Federal Reserve Board video above published Feb 5, 2018. Chairman Powell's bio.


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2018-03-05

Ignore The Noise About Trade Wars: Charting US Earnings Boost (video)

Stephen Auth Says Everyone Knows That The Chinese Have Been Cheating On Steel

Bloomberg.com video above published Mar 2, 2018: Michael Collins, PMG Fixed Income, Senior Investment Officer; Stephen Auth, CEO of Federated Investor Equities (federatedinvestors.com), Jonathan MacKay, Schroders Investment (schroders.com) Strategist share their views on U.S. Tariffs and the Markets on Bloomberg Markets.

Markets Now: Everything Rallies But the Dow as Tariff Tantrum Peters Out | Barrons.com March 2, 2018: "4:18 p.m. Call it a comeback. Despite the early losses, the S&P 500 finished up 0.5% at 2691.25 today, while the Nasdaq Composite gained 1.1% to 7257.87, and the small-company  Russell 2000 climbed 1.7% to 1533.17. Even the Dow Jones Industrial Average, which fell 70.92 points, or 0.3%, to 24,538.06, finished well off its low of the day."

graphic: Wall Street's Charging Bull
Wall Street's Charging Bull
NASDAQ Composite Up 5% This Year:

Wilbur Ross Says Steel Tariffs Are About Jobs and National Security

Bloomberg.com video above published Mar 2, 2018: U.S. Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross discusses President Donald Trump's tariff plans with Bloomberg's David Westin on "Bloomberg Markets."

Charting the US Earnings Boost

Financial Times (ft.com) video published Mar 2, 2018: The Trump tax reforms have left US companies flush with cash, and above investing more in their businesses, are boosting returns to investors. The FT.com's US business editor breaks down the numbers.

Percent increase in Q4 2017 earnings by sector


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