A crisis could be much closer than we think. EU floats headline of Turkey bailout then denies it one hour later. We call this a trial ballon by officials pic.twitter.com/9OBrwgt7Q0
— Alastair Williamson (@StockBoardAsset) August 28, 2018
regional indices starting to show weakness pic.twitter.com/QJfjmCFG8c
— Alastair Williamson (@StockBoardAsset) August 28, 2018
Again –> TRY, ARS, BRL, MXN — EM FX Pain pic.twitter.com/waS0hIGhWc
— Alastair Williamson (@StockBoardAsset) August 28, 2018
consumers have high confidence as home price index y/y hits resistance — what will officials tell the american people in a housing slump? — "we never saw it coming" pic.twitter.com/gcm5tTmSO8
— Alastair Williamson (@StockBoardAsset) August 28, 2018
Low Interest Rates Do Not Help Reduce Debt, They Encourage Debt And Malinvestment.
Number of zombie companies (those that cannot pay interest expense with op revenues) in Europe rise to all-time highs.t.co/nAi2BgdMHJ
As @OccupyWisdom has shown in the US.@BIS_org pic.twitter.com/Afna6kxK9h
— Daniel Lacalle (@dlacalle_IA) August 28, 2018
The next crisis
$1,500,000,000,000
Is more money than the sum of spending
$1,000,000 per day, everyday, since the time of the Ancient Greeks t.co/3XeToJZtcn
— OW (@OccupyWisdom) August 27, 2018
2000 #TECHBUBBLE – from 3% to 9% of total
2008 #FINANCIALCRISIS – from 6% to 12% of total
2018 ? – FROM 15% to ???
Corps that cannot pay the INTEREST on their #debt. Never mind the principal
Higher today than the aftermath of both crashes… pic.twitter.com/gaNN5ZJ4Uh
— OW (@OccupyWisdom) August 27, 2018
How Can Unemployment be 3.9% When 40% of Americans Can’t Afford Groceries and Housing?
Four in 10 Americans are struggling to pay for their basic needs such as groceries or housing, a problem even middle-class households confront, according to a new study from the Urban Institute.
Despite the U.S. economy being near full employment, 39.4 percent of adults between 18 and 64 years old said they experienced at least one type of material hardship in 2017, according to the study, which surveyed more than 7,500 adults about whether they had trouble paying for housing, utilities, food or health care.
The findings surprised researchers at the Urban Institute, who had expected to find high levels of hardship among poor Americans but hadn’t predicted so many middle-class families would also struggle to meet their basic needs. That may illustrate that a middle-class income “is no guarantee” of protection from hardship, said Michael Karpman, research associate at the Urban Institute’s health Policy Center and a co-author of the report.
Against the backdrop of President Donald Trump’s boasting about low unemployment and strong economic growth, the research adds nuance to the problems facing American families. Middle-class households tend to struggle with paying their health care bills rather than utilities, for instance. Health care costs have outpaced wages and inflation, pushing more Americans into high-deductible plans, which can backfire when serious health problems arise.
“A lot of people are looking at the fact that wages aren’t keeping up with household costs as one reason families are having difficulty making ends meet,” Karpman said. “Even for families with health insurance, they may be facing high deductibles that leave them facing high costs.”
When Many Rush For The Exit At The Same Time
Over a Billion Frozen As Investers Pull Money from Multi-Billion Dollar Bond Fund
At the start of August we reported that Swiss multi-billion asset manager, GAM Holdings announced it has frozen withdrawals at some of its bond funds after a surge in redemptions from clients who sought withdraw their money following the suspension of manager Tim Haywood….
In other words, over a billion in investor funds will be indefinitely frozen in a GAM side pocket due to “illiquid” conditions, which is strange considering the S&P just rose above 2,900 and if there was ever a market that was liquid, it is now. One dreads to imagine what would happen to fund that had to satisfy redemption requests when asset prices were falling