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Re: Trumpled (Alternative Leading)

Reply #4485
Trump has 4 years. That's all he cares about. There are no long term benefits, except to his billionaire buddies. He wants to run the US like Russia and the PRC. No dissent, no opposition, powerless, fearful population etc. It's a 100% power and wealth grab.

Those 600,000 public servants will be looking for work elsewhere - where can they go ? There's no longer jobs in the public sector, so that leaves one option, the private sector. So you will have a greater demand for private sector jobs, people will be  bidding against each other in a wage race to the bottom to secure those jobs, and the Musks of the world will be pissing themselves.

Re: Trumpled (Alternative Leading)

Reply #4486
Right now, Trump's Billionaire Buddies are losing money hand over fist.  If they tumble into recession, and unemployment and inflation take off, business will get ugly, prices will get higher, and the average punter will start becoming very restless.

Trump himself is saying things will get harder before they get better.  If he is saying that, the USA is in for a world of pain.  Trump and his billionaire mates will be slightly less richer, while Joe Average will lose his job, maybe his house, and everything he buys will be 20% dearer.  What a good deal for the American people.

Moral is, be very careful who you vote for, especially when they can blame all their sh*t decisions on the mob they took over from. Especially if they say 'it's gonna make us great again (eventually.....)'
This is now the longest premiership drought in the history of the Carlton Football Club - more evidence of climate change?

Re: Trumpled (Alternative Leading)

Reply #4487
Capitalism has recessions every 4-7 years on average. It hasn’t stopped the greatest level of wealth inequality in human history. Whatever hits the billionaire class take in the next little while won’t affect them. Stock buy backs, tax cuts, gutting of government agencies etc will guarantee their wealth continues to increase. They gave Trump ridiculous amounts of money and he will look after them.

Re: Trumpled (Alternative Leading)

Reply #4488
Capitalism has recessions every 4-7 years on average. 
Occasionally, avarice leads to revolution!
"Extremists on either side will always meet in the Middle!"

Re: Trumpled (Alternative Leading)

Reply #4489
Macron showed world leaders how to stand up to RedTrump, and RedTrump hasn't stopped throwing ineffectual rocks at France and NATO since.

RedTrump likes to imply that NATO nations are cowards and lack solidarity, which is ironic coming from RedTrump with his divisive actions and his withdrawing of support for Ukraine. RedTrump is "The Smella calling everybody else the Fella!" and we all know "He who smelt it dealt it!"
"Extremists on either side will always meet in the Middle!"

Re: Trumpled (Alternative Leading)

Reply #4490
Trump has refused to exempt us from his tariff mayhem and accordingly the ASX has been hit hard and its going to push the price of steel and aluminium up in Australia. We only sell about 1/10th of our steel output to the USA but its the arrogance and rubbish excuse from the Trump Administration that Australia have been dumping cheap, government-subsidised aluminium into the US in breach of an agreement reached during Trump's first term, when Australia was exempted from similar tariffs.
Albanese wont retaliate with Tariffs on USA goods and has paid the price for his anti Trump rhetoric in the past and Id expect Dutton to capitalise on this situation and get some political milage out of it with the promise he can do better and hope voters believe him. Its poke the bear or standup to the bear and Canada decided to stand up and copped 50% tariffs so I can see the problem Albanese has especially in an election year where his only hope is more RBA cuts and better inflation numbers, Trump has created an economic nightmare around the world which might lead to another Recession.

Re: Trumpled (Alternative Leading)

Reply #4491
Looking at mining specifically, there is currently a lot of the future development that targets China, India and Japan not so much the USA, in particular all the big players are developing pelletization(spherical blended ore dust) over Australia's traditional strength which is roughs(Crushed ore), primarily because China, India and Japan want pelletized raw feed stock to improve the green credentials of foundries. (Pellets contain less waste and require less energy to process.)

I'd suggest our miners long term are betting against the USA, it seems odd given the head honchos spend a lot of time at Mar-A-Lago, even more odd are the tariffs because a lot of the Australian operations are US or Canada owned.

A lot of RedTrumps tariff motivation was justified politically through the claim it would bring manufacturing and processing back to the USA, but it's not like you can pick up the ground and shift it across the Pacific Ocean, the roughs are the closest thing to doing just that but you transport waste too. Most customers are asking for more of the initial processing close to the mine so they aren't paying for waste to be shipped, a huge chunk of the "green" benefit comes from just that process. Processing roughs or pellets are the only sectors in which the USA can grow, it's already geared up to accept billets.
"Extremists on either side will always meet in the Middle!"

Re: Trumpled (Alternative Leading)

Reply #4492
Capitalism has recessions every 4-7 years on average. It hasn’t stopped the greatest level of wealth inequality in human history. Whatever hits the billionaire class take in the next little while won’t affect them. Stock buy backs, tax cuts, gutting of government agencies etc will guarantee their wealth continues to increase. They gave Trump ridiculous amounts of money and he will look after them.

There ends the lesson.

When was the last proper recession?  2008 (the GFC)? 

Our measures to fight recession is hyper inflation.  The problem now is, that the growth has run out of steam, the hyper inflation remains, and the bubble is about to burst.

Our covid years saw spending off the charts, which exacerbated this issue.  we have avoided recession for such a long time, and the last tool they used to combat it, was to reclassify the definition of a recession. 

If we actually experienced a recession, we might actually fix half our problems.  The seeds for todays ills financially were sown 10+ years ago.
"everything you know is wrong"

Paul Hewson

Re: Trumpled (Alternative Leading)

Reply #4493
If we actually experienced a recession, we might actually fix half our problems.  The seeds for todays ills financially were sown 10+ years ago.
So, you're possibly a follower of Keating, but Keating thinks RedTrump is a deadset moron!

I understood Keating's reasoning (For both the moron and the recession ), but those actions came with a measure of control and planning that appears to be absent from RedTrump's game plan. (fyi, I spent about 3 years working side by side with Keating's former head economic adviser, it's amazing the depth of knowledge they need to get into that role, impressive but it led to a full on mental breakdown. Says something about the level I'm at, the waste heap!)
"Extremists on either side will always meet in the Middle!"

Re: Trumpled (Alternative Leading)

Reply #4494
Looking at mining specifically, there is currently a lot of the future development that targets China, India and Japan not so much the USA, in particular all the big players are developing pelletization(spherical blended ore dust) over Australia's traditional strength which is roughs(Crushed ore), primarily because China, India and Japan want pelletized raw feed stock to improve the green credentials of foundries. (Pellets contain less waste and require less energy to process.)

I'd suggest our miners long term are betting against the USA, it seems odd given the head honchos spend a lot of time at Mar-A-Lago, even more odd are the tariffs because a lot of the Australian operations are US or Canada owned.

A lot of RedTrumps tariff motivation was justified politically through the claim it would bring manufacturing and processing back to the USA, but it's not like you can pick up the ground and shift it across the Pacific Ocean, the roughs are the closest thing to doing just that but you transport waste too. Most customers are asking for more of the initial processing close to the mine so they aren't paying for waste to be shipped, a huge chunk of the "green" benefit comes from just that process. Processing roughs or pellets are the only sectors in which the USA can grow, it's already geared up to accept billets.
We need to convince the White House that we will fight Chinese subsidies while not subsidising our own sectors.
We gave  $2 billion to the aluminium industry as part of the Green Aluminium Production efforts and the $2.4 billion pledged as part of the Whyalla steelworks rescue.
Fighting Chinese subsidies is difficult as we have to protect our large iron ore export industry, proving we are tough on China to the USA without  poking the Chinese bear too hard leaves us in the middle playing politics with nutters on both sides of the fence.


Re: Trumpled (Alternative Leading)

Reply #4495
We need to convince the White House that we will fight Chinese subsidies while not subsidising our own sectors.
We gave  $2 billion to the aluminium industry as part of the Green Aluminium Production efforts and the $2.4 billion pledged as part of the Whyalla steelworks rescue.

Fighting Chinese subsidies is difficult as we have to protect our large iron ore export industry, proving we are tough on China to the USA without  poking the Chinese bear too hard leaves us in the middle playing politics with nutters on both sides of the fence.
Those recuse plans are just commercialised welfare. I don't have a problem with welfare taking that form though, I'd rather that than nutbags sitting on their ar5e and getting a dole cheque before heading straight to the local tobacconist for some chop chop. But those industries are never ever going to be a viable profit making industry, the scale is all wrong relative to the major competitors, and the contradiction of selling ore versus making steel or aluminium is the tell.

FWIW, I have Chinese associates who tell me they are going to be well and truly screwed in the coming years by India, and have already given up competition and have started importing cheap India made product into China. It's an eye-opener when your Chinese associate (Who operates a Chinese State Built and Funded facility) tells you they can't compete with India on price, and India is not even dumping product(Not Yet!)
"Extremists on either side will always meet in the Middle!"

Re: Trumpled (Alternative Leading)

Reply #4496
If we actually experienced a recession, we might actually fix half our problems.  The seeds for todays ills financially were sown 10+ years ago.
So, you're possibly a follower of Keating, but Keating thinks RedTrump is a deadset moron!

I understood Keating's reasoning (For both the moron and the recession ), but those actions came with a measure of control and planning that appears to be absent from RedTrump's game plan. (fyi, I spent about 3 years working side by side with Keating's former head economic adviser, it's amazing the depth of knowledge they need to get into that role, impressive but it led to a full on mental breakdown. Says something about the level I'm at, the waste heap!)
Im a following of the theory of keynesian economics. 

Once upon a time, I was warned about inflation.  We are all bankrupt millionaires based on capital growth alone. The country with the highest millionaire per capita is china.  Remember aspiring to be a millionaire as a kid?  Dreaming of a house in Toorak?  Yeah, 20 times that dream will get it today.

From what I can tell, the rot began when the greenback was no longer pegged against the price of Gold, and we started printing money. 

That happened before I was born.  Its taken a long time, but we are at the point now, where the only thing that will continue fuelling growth is more people.

Thing is, like inflation, the more people you get, the more resources you need to educate, clothe, house, transport, heal them which is the only thing fueling our economy aside from exports and to maintain growth levels, as our economy expands, the only way to fix it, is more people.  More people to tax, more people to demand, more people to supply. 

So, expect continued immigration, and more crowding in places not built for it, more traffic, more frustration, more packed out days on the beach where you can barely get a spot in amongst the cool cabanas, which leads to higher prices for everything due to finite resources being spread further.

When push comes to shove, I dont care much for politicians.  Im just looking at stocks, and watching the economy.  If it continues having this trend, and we have a real bottom out, back to the stock market I go.

"everything you know is wrong"

Paul Hewson

Re: Trumpled (Alternative Leading)

Reply #4497
There ends the lesson.

When was the last proper recession?  2008 (the GFC)? 

Our measures to fight recession is hyper inflation.  The problem now is, that the growth has run out of steam, the hyper inflation remains, and the bubble is about to burst.

Our covid years saw spending off the charts, which exacerbated this issue.  we have avoided recession for such a long time, and the last tool they used to combat it, was to reclassify the definition of a recession. 

If we actually experienced a recession, we might actually fix half our problems.  The seeds for todays ills financially were sown 10+ years ago.

No two crashes are identical : sometimes they are short and shallow, sometimes deep and long. They're also unpredictable. I would consider the last downturn / recession to be 2020, but I'm not going to quibble about nomenclature. Inflation, recession, downturn, stagflation, depression, crisis blah blah blah. We can and must do better.

Re: Trumpled (Alternative Leading)

Reply #4498
I dont disagree with 2020 being a down year but it was artificial and stimulus was applied.  That was great depression specs waiting to happen and it didn't.  The stock market took a fair whack but the economy shrinking had more to do with covid measures than any other factor. 
"everything you know is wrong"

Paul Hewson

 

Re: Trumpled (Alternative Leading)

Reply #4499
This current circumstance is as artificial as it gets!
"Extremists on either side will always meet in the Middle!"