And yes, it's always faster than inflation...
According to the CPI (which is undoubtedly understated, but not to this degree), inflation between 1999 & now was around 80%. The average family premium is up 365% over the same period, or 4.5X.
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That's a little shy of double the 5-year average of -2.6%. Many companies earned modest beats in Q3, amplifying the significance of every miss.
And it remains true that positive news tends to be priced in ahead of time; negative news is more likely to surprise & produce volatility.
And right now, many of these stocks are priced for a perfect run. No surprise some are falling short.
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INTELRUNNER
The public sector is choking the private sector. It is simply required that it be smaller.
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We're up to 38 days of fun & excitement.
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INTELRUNNER
The compound annual growth rate over the last quarter century less one quarter stands at 4.9%. The long-term trend is intact despite the (wildly irresponsible) 25% swell between February 2020 & February 2022.
Advanced Economies: Australia, Canada, Czechia, Denmark, Euro Area, Hong Kong, Iceland, Israel, Japan, Macao, New Zealand, Norway, Singapore, South Korea, Sweden, Switzerland, Taiwan, UK, and the United States of America
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INTELRUNNER
Might be a warning sign...
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INTELRUNNER
The Titanic signal is triggered when a major index is at or near new highs, but the number of stocks making new 52-week lows exceeds those making new 52-week highs.
One of these recently triggered for the S&P 500. What other times in history did the Titanic signal go off for $SPX?
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INTELRUNNER
What other times in history did the Titanic signal go off for $SPX?
The Titanic signal is triggered when a major index is at or near new highs, but the number of stocks making new 52-week lows exceeds those making new 52-week highs.
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INTELRUNNER
Now the Titanic signal (or, apparently, Syndrome) in the Nasdaq 100...
๏ปฟ๏ปฟ๏ปฟ
๏ปฟ๏ปฟ๏ปฟ
๏ปฟ๏ปฟ๏ปฟ
๏ปฟ๏ปฟ๏ปฟ
This chart looks at simultaneous triggering of the Hindenburg Omen and the Titanic signal in the NASDAQ 100 in history.
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INTELRUNNER
Now, they are in deep shit, to borrow an academic term.
Side Note: Both of these countries put a lot of effort into their flags. That's good to see.
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INTELRUNNER
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INTELRUNNER
Obviously it's nothing.
Excluded? What? You're even counting that?
#Remigration now.
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Makes sense. He really did great work...
The ranking was created by building a "seed list of keywords across eight different categories of prompt style (e.g., artist names) and subject (e.g., media franchises) using the Midlibrary database and manual research."
Then the researchers "recorded the number of Al video and image prompts containing these keywords."
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MAGA apparatchiks rushed to his defense, citing silly post-pandemic, post-migration numbers about educational ability. Here's one example by way of utter clown Bill Mitchell:
"Folks may want not want to hear that, but our education system has gotten so bad that we just don't have as much elite educated talent as we need, especially in technology. It's just a fact."
In 2019, a study by Loyalka, Liu, Li, et al found that STEM student "seniors in the United States substantially outperform seniors in China, India, and Russia by 0.76-0.88 SDs and score comparably with seniors in elite institutions in these countries." You don't say?
An update study focused on computer science & electrical engineering in 2021 conducted by a similar crew of authors concluded that there were "stark differences in skill levels and gains among countries and by institutional selectivity. Compared with the United States, students in China, India and Russia do not gain critical thinking skills over four years."
It's a bunch of nonsense designed to exclude native Americans, and I won't countenance any other conclusion. It's Howard Lutnick's speciality: making America great again by replacing Americans.
Hey, wait! Wasn't that also Biden's policy?
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INTELRUNNER
Their other options were "not going far enough," "taking about the right approach," and "not sure." The 3 columns, from left to right, show results from December 2023, September 2024, and September 2025.
"Too far" is now the most popular answer at 39%, finally eclipsing "not sure," the top answer a year ago...
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INTELRUNNER
Natural gas is still four times more expensive in Europe than it is in America.
Business registrations were up 4% QoQ, and bankruptcy declarations increased 4.4% YoY.
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INTELRUNNER
Do we really need to integrate power grids? We are already stable, and we're not caught up in the bullshit in Canada & Mexico.
Just saying.
Canada is actually the largest energy supplier of US imports (and the second-largest energy importer from the US), serving for example as the source of 60% of all US oil imports.
With this in mind, and knowing how sensitive Americans are about prices at the gas pump, the Trump administration kept Canadian oil and energy tariffs at 10%, rather than the 25% slapped on everything else from Canada (and Mexico).
But don't think North American energy integration is exclusive to the US-Canadian border.
So if Canada anchors 60%, where does Mexico's $78B actually change the calculus?
As the two largest trading partners, the US and Mexico also have a significant energy relationship, albeit one smaller than its US-Canadian counterpart.
Mexico and the United States traded an impressive $78B (almost the size of Uruguay's economy) in energy goods last year, a majority of which was also in fossil fuels like oil or natural gas.
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INTELRUNNER
๐บ๐ธ ASC Super Regional Bank Index is breaking out and looks froggy.
Banks creep me out right now. Especially this tier, I think. Maybe I'm making an errorโbut banks in general...
๐ INTELRUNNER ๐
Banks creep me out right now. Especially this tier, I think. Maybe I'm making an errorโbut banks in general...
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๐บ๐ธ Gas Prices in America [2022-2025]
One small credit to Trump (he needs all he can get) is the 2025 gas price is just barely lower than Biden got it in 2024, just before the election, by dumping supply and bothering foreign nations that don't like him.
It's much lower than what Biden, Trudeau, London, Paris, and Brussels caused in 2022 & 2023.
In fact it's down 1% year-over-year to $3.084. It's really only war in an oil-relevant country (so involving unlikely war candidate nations like Iran, Russia, Venezuelaโcountries like that) that threatens to raise energy prices here.
๐ข INTELRUNNER ๐ข
One small credit to Trump (he needs all he can get) is the 2025 gas price is just barely lower than Biden got it in 2024, just before the election, by dumping supply and bothering foreign nations that don't like him.
It's much lower than what Biden, Trudeau, London, Paris, and Brussels caused in 2022 & 2023.
In fact it's down 1% year-over-year to $3.084. It's really only war in an oil-relevant country (so involving unlikely war candidate nations like Iran, Russia, Venezuelaโcountries like that) that threatens to raise energy prices here.
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