Mish's Global Economic Trend Analysis |
- Question to Millennials: Why Are You Not Mad as Hell Yet?
- #1 Reason Stocks are Declining; Is Hillary to Blame for Biotech Smash?
- Self-Driving "WEpod" Shuttles Hit the Road in Europe; Autonomous Car Updates
- Dallas Fed Region Activity Bad as Expected
Question to Millennials: Why Are You Not Mad as Hell Yet? Posted: 28 Sep 2015 11:11 PM PDT Millennials, why are you not angry about ...
I ask this in response to an email I received from Rich Renza who writes ... Hello Mish I'd like to introduce myself as a school teacher and an avid reader of your blog since 2006. I have never left a comment, but I have been reading Global Economic Analysis on a daily basis since I stumbled upon it shortly after selling a condo here in South Florida. Your analysis of the real estate bubble was spot on and aside from your astute analysis, I appreciated how you took complex economic topics and made them much easier to comprehend. Your blog was quickly added to my favorites on my home and school computer and even though I do not have a strong background in economics, it became a daily read.Renza was recently on a debt Dialogues podcast at the Ayn Rand Institute. The podcast can be played at Social Security Debt Dialogues. Mad As Hell I have not yet read Renza's e-book, so I cannot endorse it. But I can say the notion that millennials overpay and under receive is a valid one. For years I have been wondering when millennials as a generation will reach this "Not Going to Take It" point. We will not see change until millennials get mad enough to change conditions. Related Articles
Mike "Mish" Shedlock |
#1 Reason Stocks are Declining; Is Hillary to Blame for Biotech Smash? Posted: 28 Sep 2015 03:01 PM PDT In the wake of yet another big market selloff (biotechs down over 6% today), the Nasdaq 100 index down 2.87%, and the S&P down 2.56%, mainstream media parrots floated numerous reasons behind the selloff. All of the parrots are wrong. Lack of Inflation? Bloomberg interviewed Jeff Korzenik, Fifth Third Bank's chief strategist in its piece What's Really Driving Today's Selloff in U.S. Stocks?. In the accompanying video, Korzenik blamed the Fed and a "lack of visible inflation". In the same video segment, Jamie Dimon bragged about the strength of the US economy and the health of the US consumer. As long as a bubble is expanding, things always look good. Of course the idea that inflation is a benefit to stocks and the economy is preposterous, but that's what puppets have been trained to believe, and say. China to Blame? Reuters writer Noel Randewich says Wall Street Drops as Anxious Investors Eye China. "U.S. stocks finished sharply lower on Monday and were on track for their worst quarter in four years as investors worried about the health of China's economy and its potential impact on the timing of a U.S. interest rate increase." Is Hillary to Blame for Biotech Smash? Reuters writers Ransdell Pierson and Bill Berkrot say Democrats Take Aim at Drug Prices, Prompting Sharp Drops in Biotech Stocks. Democratic lawmakers on Monday attacked "massive" price increases of two heart drugs from Canada's Valeant Pharmaceuticals International Inc, fueling a rout in drugmaker shares on worries of a government and insurer clampdown on U.S. drug prices.Biotech Sector Daily That looks pretty ominous. But let's put a proper perspective on things. Biotech Sector Weekly History suggests the recent selloff is just a start of a correction. Charts like those above smack of bubbles, and bubbles typically do not deflate in an orderly manner. #1 Reason Stocks are Declining To paraphrase Bill "It's the economy, stupid" Clinton, I suggest "It's the valuations, stupid." Valuations are well beyond absurd. Many biotechs won't ever make a dime. And it's not just biotechs. Most market segments have absurd valuations. The market is starting to care, a reflection of a change in sentiment. Hillary's statements may have been a catalyst for a sentiment change, but most likely she merely goosed sentiment that had already changed. Not to Blame
To Blame Rate hike discussion is not to blame. However, the Fed itself is to blame for creating the loosey-goosey conditions that fostered a bubble in equities and junk bonds. The Fed will now have to deal with yet another asset bubble crash (they don't even see coming). Price deflation the Fed foolishly attempted to defeat, is now more likely than ever. Price deflation never was, nor ever will be, an economic problem. Asset bubbles are always a problem. The Fed still has not figured this out. Thanks to group think, the Fed never will figure this out. Bubble Debate For more on bubble valuations and why I expect negative real returns for 7-10 years, please see Bubble Debate; Equity Allocations vs. Shiller PE; Simple World. Mike "Mish" Shedlock |
Self-Driving "WEpod" Shuttles Hit the Road in Europe; Autonomous Car Updates Posted: 28 Sep 2015 11:41 AM PDT This November, in the Netherlands, the WEpod six-person passenger van, will become the world's first self-driving vehicle in regular traffic, where cars and trucks also go. The WEpod can be booked using an app which will allow passengers to reserve a seat and specify their starting points and their destinations. Vehicles are expected to select their itineraries independently.Test Phase The test phase will be on real streets and roads, but not during rush hour. The WEpods will have additional equipment such as cameras, radar, laser and GPS to track the environment. The maximum initial speed of a WEpod will be a painfully slow 25 kilometers per hour (15.53 miles per hour). I suspect that may be too slow for safety reasons, not too fast. Regardless, this will all be worked out soon enough. Audi on Highway Looking for highway tests? Then check this out. Link if video does not play: Audi's Self-Driving Car in Action. Cars Guide reports First Self-Driving Audi Due in Two Years. Please note this is 2015. Some people keep telling me that my target of 2020 is way too soon. I still have some Neanderthal readers who insist it will not happen until 2050, if at all. In limited fashion, it's happening now (November 2015 to be more precise), on real streets, with no standby driver. Autonomous passenger cars on the US highways by 2020 now seems like a certainty. And millions of truck driving jobs will vanish by 2025. Mike "Mish" Shedlock |
Dallas Fed Region Activity Bad as Expected Posted: 28 Sep 2015 10:12 AM PDT The Dallas Fed Manufacturing Survey was as bad as expected in relation to Bloomberg Econoday Consensus of -9.0. The Dallas Fed rounds out a full run of negative indications on the September factory sector with the general activity index remaining in deeply negative ground at minus 9.5. New orders are at minus 4.6 which, however, is an 8 point improvement from August. Production is actually in positive ground at 0.9.Additional Details Here are some additional details from the Dallas Fed Survey. Texas factory activity was essentially flat in September, according to business executives responding to the Texas Manufacturing Outlook Survey. The production index, a key measure of state manufacturing conditions, remained near zero (0.9), suggesting output held steady for a second month in a row after several months of declines.Mike "Mish" Shedlock |
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