economics
Imported tag from Readwise
economics
Imported tag from Readwise
Relatively high interest rates in Australia and Canada resulted in high-yield currencies that attracted foreign capital. Their relatively high interest rates were due largely to rising commodity prices.
buying power is wiped out to the same extent as productive power is wiped out.
underlying imbalances that explained the sources of growth in the global economy,
in 2022, both consumer sentiment and the misery index (the sum of inflation and unemployment levels) reached recessionary levels, but again without an NBER-defined recession:
This, I would argue, is a hallmark of fiscal dominance. The credit cycle on its own over the past couple years was typical for a recession, but the credit cycle is now smaller
... See moreThey asked a basic question of their portfolio: If we can find many different arbitrage or relative value strategies that all look individually attractive, might they look even better when combined in a certain way?
Global current account balances widened by a sizable 0.6 percentage points of world GDP in 2024. When adjusted to account for the volatility around the pandemic and Russia’s war in Ukraine, the widening is a notable reversal of the narrowing since the global financial crisis and may signal a significant structural shift.
At that time the short U.S. swap spread, the European cross-swap trade, and the short volatility trade were by far LTCM’s largest trades.
India is the world's second-largest consumer of edible oil. Our per capita consumption reached 19.7 kg per year or possibly even more — much higher than the WHO's recommended 13 kg. To give another perspective: in the 1960s, we consumed just 3.2 kg per person annually. That means an increase of more than 500% .
The main weakness of China isn’t the money or talent, but the ideological underpinning. The strategy of internal self-sufficiency for food, raw materials, energy, and now technology, coupled with a focus on exports to push other countries into dependency is essentially mercantilism, a 17th century doctrine which failed both practically and
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