Cinema Modeoff July 2022 Market Update - Key Takeaways From our July Market Update, numbers confirm inflation continues to be a top trend in the markets. Merit Financial Advisors Director of Portfolio Strategy,
My workplace is jumping onto an expansion of our phone system via Microsoft Team "Calls" function, and that is one robust, versatile app as I saw from training vid. With the changes in the workplace so prevalent today, I can see this as being very integral in how business is to be done. It's way bigger than just the video meetings and chat functions. I read a little on how it makes revenue, and how much, though a lot is unclear, other than it is growing. It would seem a good gateway to entrenching itself in a business at a very fundamental and integrated way.
I've got a good position in the stock already, but would consider adding to it based on what I am seeing.
The Fed inflation target is 2%. It's running at 9%. Even if the next 6 prints are zero, year-over-year inflation in December would still be 5.4% Meanwhile, we're at 3.5% unemployment. They'll hike with that wind at their back, and pivot once hypervaluation implodes. https://t.co/6U3CK8TNIWpic.twitter.com/3guLQYFSmM
Household debt increased by $312 billion in Q2... Anyone worried about this? I have no idea how bad that number actually is. However, people going into credit card debt is pretty bad since it can quickly become a black hole with how high credit card interest rates are...
Household debt increased by $312 billion in Q2... Anyone worried about this? I have no idea how bad that number actually is. However, people going into credit card debt is pretty bad since it can quickly become a black hole with how high credit card interest rates are...
Household debt increased by $312 billion in Q2... Anyone worried about this? I have no idea how bad that number actually is. However, people going into credit card debt is pretty bad since it can quickly become a black hole with how high credit card interest rates are...
America has always been populated by people who spend more than they have. At the same time, people have been calling for the death of the American consumer for generations. Hard to get too worked up about new predictions of Americans stopping spending.
In the end, the richer folk spend the big money and they're doing quite well, thank you. If poorer people are running up debt and get into trouble...doesn't make much difference to the economy.
take a look at ticker VCR, which tracks consumer discretionary spending. It's booming. +13% in a month. Which suggests lots of Americans spending lots of money on stuff they don't really need.
Encouraging that the new Inflation Reduction Act working it's way through Congress is going to do so much and have a reportedly modest impact on corporate profits in the coming years (at least as being assessed and reported by the likes of Goldman Sachs and others). While there is always more that can be done, it is a start, finally, in the right direction, and at a time when we considered it all but dead just months ago.
because maybe it doesn't have an open. Or a close. ("carmine9 wrote: Up 6.39% and 8.08% for the day on my two crypto holdings. Closed at $23,923 yesterday")
Or perhaps more importantly, much of a bounce from a precipitous decline.
because maybe it doesn't have an open. Or a close. ("carmine9 wrote: Up 6.39% and 8.08% for the day on my two crypto holdings. Closed at $23,923 yesterday")
Or perhaps more importantly, much of a bounce from a precipitous decline.
Encouraging that the new Inflation Reduction Act working it's way through Congress is going to do so much and have a reportedly modest impact on corporate profits in the coming years (at least as being assessed and reported by the likes of Goldman Sachs and others). While there is always more that can be done, it is a start, finally, in the right direction, and at a time when we considered it all but dead just months ago.