Errol whats your opinion on the vintage muscle car market, do you think once all the baby boomers are gone, will that market die with them or will their kids continue on even though they don't have the same emotional attachment to the old 426 Hemi as Dad did.
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Originally posted by rumrocks View PostErrol whats your opinion on the vintage muscle car market, do you think once all the baby boomers are gone, will that market die with them or will their kids continue on even though they don't have the same emotional attachment to the old 426 Hemi as Dad did.
Should equities take a 20 to 25 percent pullback, most asset classes will drop. Cash will be at some point king. But the drop in muscle cars may be shortlived. There is strong value longterm in a market despite us old guys riding off into the sunset.
Buy the dips is my opinion.
Now where did I put my spoon?
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PS: U.S. congress missed debt ceiling. Treasury dept using emergency cash saving measures.
And the stock market rallies today . . . .
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Originally posted by errolanderson View PostPS: U.S. congress missed debt ceiling. Treasury dept using emergency cash saving measures.
And the stock market rallies today . . . .
But I would be interested in your views on the actions in the repo market. A trillion is being parked their overnight. Banks would rather take a miniscule premium than lend it out into the economy? Sounds like they are questioning where the reinflation trade goes from here. People took govt money and blew it or upgraded their home or car. None of it went into improving productive capacity. The high in the US economy is probably going to wear off pretty fast.
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Originally posted by jazz View Posterrol, the US has had that debt ceiling head fake going on for 20 yrs now. Its all noise. US wont default that way.
But I would be interested in your views on the actions in the repo market. A trillion is being parked their overnight. Banks would rather take a miniscule premium than lend it out into the economy? Sounds like they are questioning where the reinflation trade goes from here. People took govt money and blew it or upgraded their home or car. None of it went into improving productive capacity. The high in the US economy is probably going to wear off pretty fast.
Bond market is a key indicator.
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Gold crash in the past 24 hours with crude oil not far behind. Gold is a key indicator of the true health of inflation.
Crude oil is the king of commodities. This will have a direct influence on the ethanol market ie: corn.
And corn is king of grain markets. They are all tied together . . . .
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Originally posted by errolanderson View PostGold crash in the past 24 hours with crude oil not far behind. Gold is a key indicator of the true health of inflation.
Crude oil is the king of commodities. This will have a direct influence on the ethanol market ie: corn.
And corn is king of grain markets. They are all tied together . . . .
Pay you don’t eat. Not a bountiful supply of things
To chew on. And if another drought next year
Look out. No one will be worried about what a
Vehicle costs or if it’s electric they’ll just want to eat.
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Originally posted by errolanderson View PostGold crash in the past 24 hours with crude oil not far behind. Gold is a key indicator of the true health of inflation.
Crude oil is the king of commodities. This will have a direct influence on the ethanol market ie: corn.
And corn is king of grain markets. They are all tied together . . . .
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Originally posted by biglentil View Post$4B of paper gold dumped on the market in a fraction of second late Sunday evening. Sound like a reasonable way to offload a position to you Errol?
China is in a major slowdown and they represent 50 percent of the entire global commodity demand.
Pork movement down 20 percent in July from previous year. Lean hogs ‘limit down’ today. Copper sales now down 10 percent.
These are strange and strained times. But as you can tell, I don’t buy into the prolonged inflation storyline at all . . . .
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Originally posted by jazz View PostDeflationary, in places. But not all. Supermarket shock today in the meat isle. Container shipping has doubled.
This is perhaps more classic stagflation aka 1970s.
Group, my apologies for being so opinionated and generally a pain-in-the-ass. But in my eyes, can see this clear as day . . . .
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Errol, any opinion on which way corn is going to break out? Building some energy there, imho.
The opportunity is there to lock in new crop at prices that corn growers could only dream of their entire farming years. Until this summer...
Right now, however, booking at almost $ 60 - $100/T under current cash prices looks unattractive.
Getting greedy can hurt you as much as bad weather?
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Originally posted by burnt View PostErrol, any opinion on which way corn is going to break out? Building some energy there, imho.
The opportunity is there to lock in new crop at prices that corn growers could only dream of their entire farming years. Until this summer...
Right now, however, booking at almost $ 60 - $100/T under current cash prices looks unattractive.
Getting greedy can hurt you as much as bad weather?
But bull has to be fed . . . .
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