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INTELRUNNER
"I've got a gut instinct we're due for a pullback here."
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INTELRUNNER
The top decile averaged 32%, while the bottom decile came up with 28%. Stocks closer to their 200DMAs produced much lower average returns, including 5-7% for the 3rd through 6th deciles.
This shows the value in momentum & growth as well as the classic sort of value in buying the right distressed equities...
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Bitcoin ($BTC) is still the undisputed champion in discussion volume, as you'd expect.
You can see Solana ($SOL) & Ethereum ($ETH) battling it out for the #2 L1 spot. That's in no way, shape, or form decided.
Ripple ($XRP) sits tightly in the 4th spot. The rest are a mix of Binance Coin ($BNB), Cardano ($ADA) and big meme coins of varying popularity ($DOGE, $PEPE, et cetera).
It's interesting to see ZCash ($ZEC) coming through more & more toward the end. There may be a bit of a privacy narrative developing...
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INTELRUNNER
Tick tock.
Other Related Content
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Since, the technology sector has been down 6.2% while everything in the S&P excluding tech has been up 5.3%.
Returns over the last 3 months:
Returns against $SPY this year:
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INTELRUNNER
This and the rotation to small caps have been the major shifts. The theme is breadth ascendant.
The yawning gap is closing.
Yesterday: Tech is Down, Ex-Tech is Up
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INTELRUNNER
26 gigawatts (from 26 reactors)
27 gigawatts (from 36 reactors)
55 gigawatts (from 57 reactors)
63 gigawatts (from 57 reactors)
97 gigwatts (from 94 reactors)
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Part of an ongoing trend. Having developed a taste for cheap, less talented Indian imports, Amazon (and Microsoft, among other woefully ungrateful tech giants who should be punished) is exporting itself to India.
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Each block represents one item in NPR's shopping cart, with a few examples highlighted.
Kleenex is down, and eggs are way down (if you buy the questionable ones). Bounty paper towels haven't moved. Coca-Cola and Head & Shoulders are upβsuper colossal shrimp and pocket paper folders are way up.
Many more products are up or the same rather than down year over year. Inflation continues to batter the masses, however much it's slowed.
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INTELRUNNER
This will confuse people about GDP.
Cue the White House.
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INTELRUNNER
This has a whole lot to do with the last post on gold exports, but America is producing more pharmaceuticals domestically and that's good.
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(GDP per capita)
The G7 is expected to average 1.2% growth, as opposed to BRICS' 3.7%.
The real GDP of BRICS economies is forecasted to grow more than three times faster than 67 nations in 2025 and 2026.
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INTELRUNNER
Total retail sales were up 0.6% while core retail sales gained 0.4%.
Sports, Hobbies, Books, & Music led with 1.9%, followed by Miscellaneous Stores (1.7%), Gas Stations (1.4%), and Building Materials (1.3%). Furniture & Home Furnishings brought up the rear with -0.1%.
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Living conditions vary widely across the European Union, from home ownership rates and rental costs to the degree of household overcrowding.
Romania, which has the highest proportion of homeowners, also struggles with significant overcrowding. At the other end of the spectrum. Germany has the largest share of renters, with rental prices close to the EU average.
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INTELRUNNER
Every day, it appears more and more likely that we will be grappling with a surge in unemployment before the resurgence of inflation.
Supply is the employed plus the unemployed. Demand is the employed plus job vacancies.
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INTELRUNNER
It is the difference between labor demand (the sum of job openings & civilian employment) and labor supply (civilian labor force).
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As the silver price reaches the 90s (it was $30/oz this time last year), let's take a look at the top silver-producing nations in the world and their annual outputs:
Mexico leads global production, despite having only 6% of the world's reserves...
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INTELRUNNER
The partisans make sense. They like their side, they hate the other side, etc. The opposition thinks their party isn't obstinate enough. The party in power gives their people way too much leeway.
You know the drill. But what is going on with independents? 20% approve of the congressional GOP, 21% approve of the congressional Dems, but 12% approve of Congress as a whole...
That sort of reads like a lot of these independents are still leaning pretty hard in one direction or the other.
Americans have quite the electoral process at this point. Both parties compete to be the most corrupt and damaging party in history, and then, having done nothing for Americans, they turn to them and insist they pick between them.
Further, they insist whatever happens to them is their fault because they get to vote.
Further still, they insist voting is the only really legitimate form of political opposition.
Something has to give.
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INTELRUNNER
As a matter of fact, we're reaching 2020 levels of dovishness...
Just when they calmed down about Trumpflationβhere comes QE.
Just when they calmed down about Trumpflationβhere comes QE.
The blue one is the recent one. As you can see, it's went higher. As it stands, the 10Y yield is around the same place as it was before the rate cutting began.
This also happened in the 70s when the Feds were being profligate and anti-capitalist then.
And it just stands to reason: if the federal government is borrowing so much money that the Fed's toolkit is essentially constrained to monetization (at least within the framework of traditional dipshit economics), why would you want any of your capital going there?
Add in the fact that everyone around the world can see the money is going toward corruption, violence, and repression, and it's not a very convincing investment thesis, is it?
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That means over 3% of the workforce would prefer a full-time job but can only work part-time.
This can be because they can't find one or because their bosses cut their hours below 35 per week. Either way, it's an involuntary situation.
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