Bank of America: "The economy is crashing Jun 23-Dec 24 - WITH NO SURVIVORS
| 180 site | 01/17/23 | | Zippy really tough guy | 01/17/23 | | Rambunctious drab stead degenerate | 01/17/23 | | bateful church building | 01/17/23 | | Vigorous Party Of The First Part Public Bath | 01/17/23 | | smoky spot masturbator | 01/17/23 | | vibrant bossy friendly grandma goal in life | 01/17/23 | | smoky spot masturbator | 01/17/23 | | Tan indecent black woman | 01/17/23 | | vibrant bossy friendly grandma goal in life | 01/17/23 | | Racy Alcoholic Shrine Weed Whacker | 01/17/23 | | Stirring Kitchen Azn | 01/17/23 | | Low-t ruddy gas station fortuitous meteor | 01/17/23 | | cerebral box office | 01/17/23 | | vibrant bossy friendly grandma goal in life | 01/17/23 | | Zippy really tough guy | 01/17/23 | | cooked unc | 05/01/26 | | Massive Penile Appendage | 05/01/26 |
Poast new message in this thread
Date: January 17th, 2023 7:45 PM Author: vibrant bossy friendly grandma goal in life
The divergence of opinion about what the next 12 months will be is really wild. I can’t remember a time like it that wasn’t the immediate aftermath of a major crisis moment like 9/11 or the job loss peak of ITE (when it was not clear that it was a peak). The chart just pointing to rate hikes and crashes seems quite stupid, though. Go back to the rate hikes from the early 80s (ie the last time there was inflation that was as bad as today) or the 1991 recession. Odds are we haven’t perfectly threaded the needle and the incentives of the Fed always seem to run toward overcorrection. But it’s relatively lucky that 1) China stimulated significant onshoring while also renouncing zero Covid, 2) the Ukraine war has followed a path where Euros are hanging together and still buying way more of our oil and gas than they otherwise would, and 3) tech layoffs and crypto fallout seem to be pretty self contained so far. I also suspect it’s hard to calculate the benefit across the entire economy of 1M deaths of a population most likely to be medically and care intensive for a much longer period (ie a death from Covid after two weeks in the ICU is much cheaper than a death from diabetes/heart disease/cancer/etc. after years of treatments and months in hospice). The only reason I’m not more optimistic for a soft landing is that we don’t have the same obvious upside in the economy that we had in 2008 with the iPhone recently debuted, all the Web 2.0 companies just getting going, Amazon just beginning cloud computing, streaming in its infancy, and all the help the federal balance sheet got from just spending less in Iraq, let alone actually pulling out. Today there’s EVs that are much more of a slow and steady/mixed bag kind of shift in the economy. There’s AI but that mainly seems like automation of lower skilled work (also a mixed bag). There’s the hope that more people working from home can lead to a renewal of entrepreneurship, and there is some hope that cybersecurity becomes a decent growth engine. The most likely outcome for the next two years seems to be muddling through with mixed results.
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=5272284&forum_id=2...id#45803490) |
|
|