Yes, that’s it. The tariffs help the economy. |
No fool learn basic economics And history Tariffs are nothing but a tax on the consumer terrible negotiation and stupidity you go on and agree with the guy who has never once had a successful anything but running a koolaid filed cult |
Also someone with no understanding of how farms work. Soybeans aren't solely grown by a small number of farmers. They are a rotation crop that many (most?) grain farmers in the midwest grow in order to rebalance nitrogen in their fields after corn (which strips nitrogen). Anyone who has been there in late summer/September would know this because you see corn and soybeans EVERYWHERE. It's also a disaster maybe for next year if enough farmers don't get paid to make their seed/equipment investments for the 2026 season. Maybe corn might jump in price for next years harvest because of reduced supply next year. Does "no one care" about corn farmers? In the United States? The lack of basic understanding of how these systems work, and the consequences of these actions, are exactly why we are well and truly...you get it. But of course PP doesn't. |
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I like to think a good analogy to the stock market is California real estate, which has defied all predictions for the last 30 years. It's overpriced, ridiculous, seemingly unsustainable, but yet for 30+ years it's kept going up with nothing more than the briefest of dips here and there. When you delve into the weeds, the reasons are quite clear, too much money chasing too few housing.
Same with the stocks. The stock market is predominantly propped up by the top 20% of Americans directly or indirectly via institutional investors. They don't know where else to park money. They really have limited options for putting money. And as such, the market keeps going up and up, with nothing more than temporary dips here and there. And it has to be said the US economy is not in a bad place. It's slowing down and we can argue the continued growth in markets is exuberance out of sync with the economy, but it ignores that the stock market's economy is the top 20%, not the bottom 80% (just like California real estate). Will markets drop every now and then? Sure. Absolutely. But trying to game for the next drop rather than focusing on the long run is like people trying to game the real estate market by waiting for prices to drop when it just keeps going up. And when prices do briefly drop they only missed on years of equity growth and still buying something more expensive than five years ago. |
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So many people on this thread seem to think that people with any sort of concern are going to just pull their entire savings out of the market.
The question, to me, seems to be if you will hold onto more cash for a/ to use in a major long-term downturn or b/ to buy more stocks at the downturn. And, also how one might rebalance their portfolio to weather any storms. |
Trump pays for Argentina's healthcare but not ours. |
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I love the permabulls in here who seemingly can’t see what’s in front of their face. Jobs reports, inflation, it’s like it just doesn’t click with you. You think everything is great. at the same time I’ve learned so much about people recently and cognitive dissonance, blind faith and so forth. It’s ghastly and fascinating. You either don’t want to see it or you straight are silo’ed off from sources that are trying to show you.
Anyway, my only point is those folks who can’t just leave their money in the market in the next few years to see it continue to go up, which is inevitably always does, will be pretty fked if they don’t have social security to live on. |
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I just shifted to 60% international stock funds.
With a weakening dollar, it seems like a safer choice. |
I did, too, months ago. However, I’m fully cognizant that international stocks will take the same hit and drop down in value drastically in unison with the US. I’m going to move into bonds after a while. After the rate cuts and QE that are coming in an attempt to prop up the market. We have market euphoria to go for a while. All the AI and tech and random stocks will pump, but the jobs numbers will keep coming out and inflation will keep rising and gold will continue to go up. Anyway, keep telling me I’m wrong, but keep watching what’s happening. Hint. It’s not on Fox. |
Fear porn is fascinating to watch. -- not a Fox watcher. |
You really don't understand markets and economies, do you? And everything you accuse of others applies to you equally. |
I really think this thread is about the people suffering in this economy. You know the ones who don't have savings and so nothing in "the market." They don't have money to buy food a the supermarket add could not care less about the stock market. The top 1% owns 50% of the stock in the US. Most people in the bottom 50% own none. |
Yeah, sorry I can’t understand markets as well as you. Could you educate me how inflation, and job numbers being revised down or obfuscated, Fed members geting fired and loss of Fed independence, loss of farm exports, goods prices rising, consumer sentiment souring, or how Wall Street is using alternate data sources now to BLS reports to gauge market conditions is bullish? I mean maybe it is bullish for investors 10 years from now, who, post-crash, will inherit a rising stock market, if we are able to build back, and haven’t squandered all our good will and economic might…but really could you please lay out a case for tariffs and generally how you see things are right now as bullish. I’d really appreciate the lesson. |
Half or less of what you invested…. Over 20+ years the amount of money I have invested has easily doubled. Are you really predicting in 5 years that we will see a greater than 75% drop from where we are now? I also think you are saying this drop won’t happen for a few years and the market will go up more from here but then there will be a downturn. So are we looking at 80-90% drop at that point? Is that what you are predicting? |
So 50% of the people in this country can't buy food in the supermarket? Never fear, they'll be able to frequent Comrade Mamdani's discount government grocery store. The government cheese will be on sale. |