Getting tired of living through these record days.
Are we GREAT AGAIN yet?Getting tired of living through these record days.
I just read the Iranian rial has now dropped to 1,043,000 per US dollar a new all time record low, partially due to plunging crude pricee s.
Iran is now petitioning mediators to open talks with the U.S. to discuss sanctions on the country.
No one likes a braggartI’ve lost a month of NIL for a Heisman contending quarterback in the past week.
I’m looking at everything I own. As I stated in an earlier thread, I sold all but ten shares of every stock I owned two weeks ago. I had reached my limit of what I was willing to lose. More tariffs will automatically hit wednesday so I’ll just be waiting and watching for a few more days.So what stock(s) are you looking at for tomorrow?
All of them.So what stock(s) are you looking at for tomorrow?
You sure, every time I refresh, it keeps moving.Futures trading suspended.
We put a game show host in control of the global economy. Buckle up.
It’s all good if I don’t get laid offY’all act like the market going down is a bad thing. It’s just an opportunity waiting to be taken advantage of!
What does post recovery look like? Prices for almost everything are about to sky rocket. Even if some manufacturers move back, do prices suddenly drop after a company spends millions on CAPEX?I'm not very happy, but as the man said, when a patient has surgery, there is a recovery period.
Hoping.
Just looked at my stocks, and fortunately they are down less than .50 cents (after Hours/ Pre market)
Oops, that happened to me but I'm a contract consultant so it's not uncommon.It’s all good if I don’t get laid off
My worry is that the reciprocal tariffs were so dramatic because the administration was overconfident that everyone would be crawling to us looking for a deal. While it has happened with some smaller players like Cambodia and Vietnam, China retaliated big time and now the EU is doing the same.
it wasn’t expected and they don’t know what to do. Maybe this noise is over in a week, 30 days, 90 days, but with tomorrows implied opening, nearly $5 trillion of wealth has disappeared in three days.
Not much we can do other than shut up, hold on and hope we keep our jobs.
You haven’t had to use sprinklers this month. CongratsYou could be farming right now. Things look greeeeat.
I don't think they have planted, either.You haven’t had to use sprinklers this month. Congrats
Grandma said never plant before Easter.I don't think they have planted, either.
You haven’t had to use sprinklers this month. Congrats
I don't think they have planted, either.
Ha, We have the garden covered.Grandma said never plant before Easter.
I wonder how many realize they voted for this, something that didn't remotely happen in Term 1My worry is that the reciprocal tariffs were so dramatic because the administration was overconfident that everyone would be crawling to us looking for a deal. While it has happened with some smaller players like Cambodia and Vietnam, China retaliated big time and now the EU is doing the same.
it wasn’t expected and they don’t know what to do. Maybe this noise is over in a week, 30 days, 90 days, but with tomorrows implied opening, nearly $5 trillion of wealth has disappeared in three days.
Not much we can do other than shut up, hold on and hope we keep our jobs.
I suspect that even if we stay in a trade war and get some incremental capital investment because of it, it will be of the high tech / highly automated variety that aren't big job creators for the people that hope to benefit from it. We don't live in 1970 any longer. We have to figure out how to compete in an automated lower labor world.What does post recovery look like? Prices for almost everything are about to sky rocket. Even if some manufacturers move back, do prices suddenly drop after a company spends millions on CAPEX?
I’m no expert in this at all, but from my view, there are 2 outcome: 1) prices skyrocket and there is marginal to no new manufacturing jobs; 2) prices skyrocket and there are manufacturing investments. In scenario one, I’d assume the tariffs eventually end and we go back to the way we were but after we tanked the economy and stock market. Scenario 2, the prices are the new normal and we did all that for a few more $50k a year jobs. I’d love to be wrong, but I just don’t see it. The customers I have that import stuff don’t have much of a choice but to raise prices of their end product. I’ve not heard a single customer say they are about to spend millions on a new plant.