House Committee on the Judiciary Subcommittee on Antitrust, Commercial and Administrative Law: “Reviving Competition, Part 2: Saving the Free and Diverse Press.”
House Committee on the Judiciary Subcommittee on Antitrust, Commercial and Administrative Law: “Reviving Competition, Part 2: Saving the Free and Diverse Press.”
To avoid getting lost, you have to know how to find your location.
There are no street addresses in a combat area. However, by using
a military map, you can find your location without difficulty. Maps
have black lines running up and down (north and south) and
crosswise (east and west). These lines form small squares called
“grid squares” that are numbered along the outside edge of the map
picture. Using these numbers, you can identify each grid square.
No two squares have the same number. To get the right numbers
for a certain grid square, read from left to right along the bottom
and locate the line that borders the grid square on the left. Then
read up and find the east-west line that borders the grid square
along the bottom.
The World Gold council released their 2018 demand trends which showed Central banks demand for gold surged to the highest level in over 50 years. Central bank net purchases reached 651.5t in 2018 that's a whopping 74% higher than 2017. WGC noted that this increase was the highest level of annual net purchases since the suspension of dollar convertibility into gold in 1971. That's not all bar and coin demand showed Gold bar demand mainly flat but coin demand surged to the Second highest level ever recorded.
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VHjDrZSLmQw
Mnuchin warns unemployment could soon reach 20% or 33 million job losses in America due to the production halts and work stoppage beginning in major cities around the US. They have developed a stimulus plan which may include checks mailed to every American for $1,000 to help soften the blow from an immediate drop in income. It must be pretty bad if they plan to send out money to everyone. More immediate problems face us as the Walmart shelves don't seem to be being restocked. The food is now the main focus even though the toilet paper was also gone. What was shocking was that there was no rice, no flour, no meat, no eggs, canned foods were hit hard and the frozen food coolers were bare. The Port of LA has just reported the lowest shipping container activity since the financial crisis. I am beginning to wonder how much of this is tied to supply chain disruptions working the way through the system. There seems to be supply issues if the shelves can't stay stocked.
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0H4k2nNC4Pw
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The latest data from Manheim shows how the Bureau of Labor Statistics' September print for used cars and trucks index is about to soar.
The Manheim U.S. Used Vehicle Value Index increased 8.3% in the first 15 days of October compared to September. From a year ago, the index is up a whopping 37%.
there is also trouble for aluminum, used in engine blocks, transmission cases, frames, paneling, and much more, could be in short supply in the months ahead. So for the next CPI print, expect used car prices to be hot.
Federal Reserve Gov. Randal Quarles on Wednesday warned that additional government spending being contemplated could lead to “transitory” inflation continuing for too long.
The Labor Department reported that the consumer price index, a key inflation gauge that measures how much Americans pay for goods and services, rose about 0.4 percent in September. The year-over-year prices increased 5.4 percent, which some noted is the largest yearly increase since January 1991.
Quarles acknowledged that inflation is currently running at more than twice the Federal Open Market Committee’s (FOMC’s) longer-run goal, yet he said he was, “not quite ready to conclude that this ‘transitory’ period is already ‘too long.'”
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jy-LkvJhv2w
The entire food production and distribution system is breaking down at a time when farmers are dumping millions of gallons of milk down the drain and plowing over tons of tomatoes. The US food production and distribution system is complex and it's not just as simple as point A to point B. Farmers are actually very busy trying to revision their operations and many of the grocery stores already have contracts with large farms. Many of Americas small farmers are over their head in debt and their main customers are restraints and hotels which have been closed for business. The weather was not very kind last growing season and millions of acres were left unplanned there are predictions we will see the same thing again this season. The shelves are empty and the lines at the food banks are miles long at major cities around the world. That's why the fact that states have begun to limit access to seeds is becoming a real issue for many. This is a time we should be turning back to self-sufficiency and that option may not be available for many.
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_J2NHjBkRmI
Economic collapse news. All eyes he been on the Fed this week as containing the overnight funding markets has become a full time job. We now see the fed plans expanding their liquidity inducing measure. They also announced plans to conduct repo operations until October 10. We also see According to a new gallop poll the majority of American now believe a recession is imminent. It was also divided along income as respondents who made less than 40,000 thought recession risk was higher. We also see the gallop economic confidence index plummets lower than level we saw during the great recession. This is a consumer economy...
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LIFGILAwVcY
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the US dramatically changed how it calculated consumer inflation back in the 1980s with the most important difference being the CPI of the 1970s included house price inflation, the current measure does not. Instead, home price pressures have been swept the Owner-Equivalent Rent which can be whatever people in power want it to be. If today's CPI did include house prices in its measurement, the currently reported inflation numbers for house price inflation would push CPI and core CPI to double-digit gains.
The CPI printed +6.8% YoY - right as expected and the fastest rate of increase since 1982.
Core CPI, Which removes almost everything you spend money on every day rose at 4.9% YoY, The highest level since 1991.
The drivers of inflation were increasingly broad-based, rather than just in a few categories. Both Goods and Services costs rose, as did Food and Energy prices, everything rose in price.
The shelter index increased 0.5 percent over the month, as the indexes for rent and owners’ equivalent rent both rose 0.4 percent; these increases were the same as in October. Nov Shelter inflation rose 3.84% Y/Y, up from 3.38% in October and Nov Rent inflation jumped 3.05% Y/Y, up from 2.70% in October. The index for lodging away from home rose 2.9 percent in November after rising 1.4 percent in October.
Vehicle indexes also continued to rise in November. The index for used cars and trucks rose 2.5 percent over the month, the same increase as in October. The index for new vehicles rose 1.1 percent in November after a 1.4-percent increase in October.
The index for household furnishings and operations increased in November, rising 0.8 percent, the same increase as in October. The apparel index rose 1.3 percent in November after being unchanged in October. The index for airline fares turned up in November, rising 4.7 percent after declining in recent months.
Fed funds futures were fully pricing in a rate hike by the June meeting, alongside more than 70% chance of one by the May meeting (and almost 3 full rate-hikes priced-in by the end of 2022), but notably 2Y Yields dropped on the CPI print as it missed the +7.0% anticipation.
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Bw51Qs2ypC4
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Today I wanted to dig into the fact we don't even seem to have enough batteries for the world to drive electric vehicles. The rhetoric about the "green" vehicles being perfect for the environment with little consequence isn't exactly 100% accurate.
Just over the last two months, we've written not only about how much driving needs to be done in EVs to make them better for the environment than internal combustion engine vehicles, but we've also noted that EV carbon footprints aren't necessarily as better than traditional vehicles as many people think.
Now, more questions are starting to be raised about the potential unintended consequences of the EV revolution. Notably, how can the metals used for EV batteries be recycled and reused as part of a circular economy before a materials crunch - or environmental impact from mining - negates the "green" label affixed to EV vehicles.
Many companies have been in hot water over the method of sourcing cobalt for batteries including Dell.
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QytESmBavDM