Saturday, May 18, 2013

BRIEFS

We've talked about this sector before, so we won't labor the point. This article lists some of the reasons we would own parts of this sector before not after it rebounds. And it will rebound.

http://www.marketwatch.com/story/4-reasons-why-resources-stocks-are-a-natural-bet-2013-05-16?pagenumber=2
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rle

Threat of Default": US hits debt limit on Saturday, but by using a slew of shuffle maneuvers, shell games, tricks, and devices, the US won't actually run out of money until "after Labor Day," Treasury Secretary Jacob Lew told Congress in a letter. In his previous statement, the US would be "okay until Labor Day." Today, he was more frantic. He begged Congress to get its act together and do something "sooner rather than later" to “remove the threat of default.” In its infinite wisdom, Congress had suspended the debt limit till May 18, rather than dealing with it. The debt, though still over the limit, declined in April and early May; tax extractions were fattened by asset bubbles. But since May 10, the debt has once again been rising.  
                                                                    Testosterone Pit
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One thing nobody seems to focus on is services inflation. It’s slower to turn both up and down. Services inflation got up to 4.7% in June 2008. It dropped below 2% in February 2009 and stayed below until August 2011. We’ve been mostly above since and reached a high of 2.9% in February 2013. The last two months have backed off to 2.6%. This compares to 0.5% for the regular CPI. Since November 2012, services inflation has been stronger than overall inflation. Maybe this is a good thing for an economy that’s 80-90% services and shows demand; but, I don’t really think so for an economy with a coincident index growth rate of 1.4%. If the Fed really want’s 2% inflation, they already have it for most of the economy. Why they focus on core and these other measures doesn’t make much sense.
                                           Daily Speculations


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