What Really Happened In 2015, And What Is Coming In 2016...
Submitted by Michael Snyder via The Economic Collapse blog,
A lot of people were expecting some really big things to happen in 2015, and most of them did not happen. But what did happen?
Submitted by Michael Snyder via The Economic Collapse blog,
A lot of people were expecting some really big things to happen in 2015, and most of them did not happen. But what did happen?
It all started off relatively well: oil and US equity futures were buoyant on hopes Iran and Saudi Arabia would break out in a bloody conflict any minute boosting the net worth of shareholders of the military industrial complex, and then, out of nowhere, like a depressed China in a bull shop, the "mainland" crashed the party following a terrible manufacturing PMI report, which sent Chinese stocks sliding slowly at first, then very fast.
With China closing the morning session limit down, US equity futures are extending their losses (even though crude futures are holding some of their gains). The initial knee-jerk jump as crude rose on Saudi tensions has been entirely erased and Dow Futures are now down 300 points from New Year's Eve highs... Happy New Year.
China closed the morning session "not off the lows" with a bloodbath in ChiNext and Shenzhen...
With Offshore Yuan crashing over 440 pips - the most since the August deval...
Two months ago, and roughly 6 weeks before the Fed's first rate hike in 9 years, Janet Yellen warned that if the "outlook worsened, the fed might weight negative rates" adding that "negative rates could help encourage banks to lend."
Submitted by Peter Tchir of Brean Capital,
The Manufacturing Economy versus The Service Economy
As we start the new year, there is a debate raging within the market. No the debate isn’t whether there is weakness in the manufacturing economy, that is taken as a given, especially after Friday’s awful Chicago Purchasing Manager number of 42.9.
No, the debate boils down to this:
The bears will argue that
The U.S. economy has always done poorly when manufacturing has turned this weak