Inflation Worries Surge; Most Voters Rate Biden ‘Poor’ on Economy#Inflation #breakingpollt.co/I7QZdteiTd
Sponsored by @RaheemKassam and #NationalPulse pic.twitter.com/5j8Jlcqs1n
— Rasmussen Reports (@Rasmussen_Poll) October 18, 2021
Always remember that the first sign of supply-related inflation in the pandemic era came from Dalian corn futures:t.co/ZswsymHwnB pic.twitter.com/2xVYWIB032
— Tracy Alloway (@tracyalloway) October 18, 2021
Interesting stat… 43% of EM #CentralBanks now 'tight' pic.twitter.com/R08aUbBPII
— CrossBorder Capital (@crossbordercap) October 14, 2021
Consumer Sentiment in U.S. Falls to Second-Lowest Since 2011
Inflation Surges Worldwide as Covid-19 Lockdowns End and Supply Chains Can’t Cope: WSJ
More than a dozen central banks have raised interest rates but two that haven’t are those that loom largest over the global economy: the Federal Reserve and the European Central Bank.
Oil Up, Climb to Highest Level in Years Over Continuing Global Energy Crunch
With its pandemic recovery in the rear-view mirror, China now faces a prolonged period of slower growth t.co/7jvCjzizxE
— Real Time Economics (@WSJecon) October 18, 2021
China’s coal prices are soaring because electric power consumption has surged, domestic coal production has been flat since 2012 and imports from Australia have been zeroed out. @alpinemacro via @SoberLookt.co/RFI42omMPZ pic.twitter.com/kmnH7iqE9m
— Adam Tooze (@adam_tooze) October 18, 2021
Huge moves in UK rates markets. Full 25 bps rate hike next month almost fully priced in, then 50 bps by Feb, 100 bps by next summer. That's … pretty aggressive.
But UK curves flattening sharply, suggesting BoE policy error or growth slowdown. Or botht.co/mAPqenVyd5
— Jamie McGeever (@ReutersJamie) October 18, 2021