If you find this video valuable, please consider sharing it with someone who could benefit from it. Your support helps our channel grow and motivates Ken to keep making videos like these. Thank you
The Fed's talk of interest rate cut leaves me pondering what stocks to buy now and when do I sell? I'm unsure how to properly allocate my money to achieve an optimal portfolio in this present economy, my goal is huge for retirement.
Navigating market volatility can be challenging, it might be beneficial consulting with an advisor to provide personalized insights based on your specific situation and financial position
No doubt, getting proper financial advice is invaluable, my portfolio is well-matched for every season of the market and just yielded a much better % from early last year. I and my advisor are working on a 7 figure ballpark goal, though this could take another year.
Annette Marie Holt has always been on the top of my list..She is regarded as a genius in her area and well knowledgeable about financial markets. I highly recommend you look her up if you want excellent collaboration.
Thanks for sharing. I curiously searched for her full name and her website popped up immediately. I looked through her credentials and did my due diligence before contacting her.
The continuously changing economic conditions in our society have made it necessary for people to find additional sources of income, thus I am looking at the stock market to fuel my retirement goal of $3m, my only concern is the recent market crash.
Agreed, despite my rookie knowledge of investing, I have a financial advisor who did the trick in a bit more than 6 months after a lump sum capital of $500k, and I've so far made a fortune. I'm now buying real estates, gold and silver as advised by my FA.
Carol Vivian Constable is the licensed fiduciary I use. Just research the name. You’d find necessary details to work with a correspondence to set up an appointment.
I feel investors should be focusing on under-the-radar stocks, and considering the current rollercoaster nature of the stock market, Because 35% of my $270k portfolio comprises of plummeting stocks which were once revered and i don't know where to go here out of devastation
Safest approach i feel to tackle it is to diversify investments. By spreading investments across different asset classes, like bonds, real estate, and international stocks, they can reduce the impact of a market meltdown
A lot of folks downplay the role of advlsors until being burnt by their own emotions. I remember couple summers back, after my lengthy divorce, I needed a good boost to help my business stay afloat, hence I researched for licensed advisors and came across someone of utmost qualifications. She's helped grow my reserve notwithstanding inflation, from $275k to $850K
This is definitely considerable! think you could suggest any professional/advisors i can get on the phone with? I'm in dire need of proper portfolio allocation
Viviana Marisa Coelho is her name. She is regarded as a genius in her area and works for Empower Financial Services. By looking her up online, you can quickly verify her level of experience. She is well knowledgeable about financial markets.
I replaced a water heater in 2018 for less than $1000, for labor and materials. I just replaced the same water heater in 2024 for $2700, for labor and materials.
AND the 2018 one should have lasted longer than 6 years. I just had a deck and staircase replaced for a second floor unit and it was $22,480, plus a week of hotel and meal expenses for the tenant. And now that unit needs a new heat pump for $6200. This fall I have to replace another deck and have concrete footers and a pad poured, so that’s $31k. Tenants have no clue how much this stuff costs (to do it right) and certainly can’t afford it themselves.
Landlord here. Honestly with over $1mio in real estate and about two thirds of that in debt I just break even each month. It would be more efficient to sell the assets, pay off the debt, and put the difference in the bank. The operational costs and finance costs have doubled and what was cash flow is no longer cash flow even with rent increases. I’m honestly one more whiney text from a tenant from evicting everyone and selling up. Last week I had a tenant whine about the noise of traffic outside… the windows are all double glazed… but they said they had opened the window because it was warm indoors and now they can hear traffic… wtf am I meant to do about that?! Whiney gen-x tenants that rot the bathroom floors by leaving a sodden wet bath mat on them or flood the bath and just leave it to air dry… they don’t get that there’s an expectation on them to change their own light bulbs and if they’re going to get me to call out an electrician it’s going to have a cost.
@@josephedlin2172 same. I cash flow about $20k annually on about $1mm across 4 properties and I only raise rents when I have to spend a lot on maintenance and repairs, yet I get Boomers who retired with no savings and living on SS complaining even though they had very cheap rent while the property was wasting away, they bought newer cars than they needed and smoked. 🤷♂️ But save my username if you do ever sell. 😅
At 63, I just don't want to own anything anymore! I just sold my house and am getting 4.28% for 3 years in a US Treasury ensuring that much of my rent payments for an apartment will be paid. I believe the long end of the curve will not be dropping and may rise with inflation in future months with the increase of Stagflation. After three years I will make new investment decisions. I just don't think the 'Duration Risk Premium" will fall from here. There are so many Black Swans in the sky that could drive up inflation, slow growth, and put us into recession. As unemployment rises, supply will rise and housing should correct. I don't trust the stock markets any longer as it's highly manipulated, concentrated, with stock buybacks, hype, and passive ETF inflows. If the Mag 7 falls, so will the indexes and employment.
Ken, I heard on another real estate channel that intrest rates would be lowered at a faster rate than they were raised, but you are saying the complete opposite of that. Thanks
the other day I saw someone live in Phoenix for 30+ years still waiting for a crash. In his opinion the 2008 is not deep down enough. I would say for those kind of people they will never be able to brave enough to start a loan and purchase a house.
In 301 AD, Emperor Diocletian implemented rent control in Rome through his Edict on Maximum Prices to address inflation and protect tenants from soaring rents. Although it offered temporary relief, enforcement was difficult, resulting in market distortions and a housing shortage. This happened in Rome and will more than likely happen again, reflecting the ongoing challenge of balancing tenant protection with market dynamics.
If people are shopping at those expensive stores and are financing it in masses, I don't feel bad for them at all when they complain that they have no money. These aren't necessities. Who buys at these stores? Millennials and Zoomers.
When rates are cut house prices will decrease so equity will decrease and debt will be to high. Those with to much leverage in property will be in trouble. Those with massive amounts of equity and cash will clean up. Like a lot of people done after the GFC . Those people had cash and maybe great borrowing power. Id love to see a list of people that had few properties before the GFC and cleaned up after, like George gammon. That said people that done that shouldn’t expect any difference now except you should be cashed up , NOT heavy in property and debt
Prices have been dropping in many markets for a year now. If a seller was looking for top dollar on their home sale, they should've sold in early 2023.
Personally, I use Bilt (for rent). I wish I could use it for mortgage too (I am both a renter and an landlord). I tried it and they denied the payment LOL
@@brucebrucefoundation I know, right? I know where we can get 12 eggs for $2.99 (it's this magical place called Ralphs). We could do some serious egg arbitrage with these price points.
The Fed manipulation of interest rates (i.e., bond yields) doesn't matter. Government deficit-spending is the cause of inflation, because the Fed must monetize the government debt. While the government is deficit-spending, the inflation rate will continue to increase, which is the secret default on the debt, including Social Security and Medicare. "The most important thing to remember is that inflation is not an act of God, that inflation is not a catastrophe of the elements or *a disease that comes like the plague.* Inflation is a policy." -- Ludwig von Mises
kept rates low for to long created real estate mess across the board. flipper mania , big corp investors, foreign buyers. BAM pandemic and then work from home. Its great that houses are invested in , repaired made better and resold but there needs to be some kind of regulation. The generation of people trying to afford shelter is pushing up prices because companies have to compete and pay higher wages.
The losers explanation ( cash , sidelines ) was not very well elaborated upon 🤔. How is anybody sitting on cash while earning 5% a losing proposition? The money is more liquid than ever at this point , ready to move positively in many directions , isn’t it ?
I disagree with the winners being home buyers and construction. When you go into a recession I have yet to see construction, home buying, consumer spending etc. The “loser” in cash is making 5% paying little taxes on that. When a recession hits and asset value falls they can take advantage of that opportunity. More likely to see deflation than inflation. 11:57. Based on history they will cut rates fast. Just look at a chart of Fed funds.
They ain’t cutting rates. core pce is still too high. When inflation comes out in a few days you are gonna see a 0.2 jump month over month. And also once the new unemployment numbers become out you are going to see unemployment go down. When those things happen the fed will have no choice but to not cut.
It doesn't matter what percentage the Fed cuts! The Fed will continue buying government debt, and the government will continue deficit spending. And, consumers will face increasing costs across the board.
Isn’t the economy going to be cratering when they’re lowering rates? I would imagine they will not be lowering interest rates unless the economy is in big trouble and it needs them! As an example, they started lowering interest rates during the great recession in September of 2007 They start lowering interest rates in December of 2008 just to give you a little perspective there.
The US economy is already in recession. Any rate cut will not ignite inflation. The banks will tighten even more, all consumer and corporate credit lending. This is the beginning of a deflationary period for your assets. Stocks markets will decline, and stock values disappear in a blink of the eye. Businesses will begin layoffs in earnest which will soon be reflected in the unemployment rate and unemployment claims, to further solidify the recession. In fact, when the FED cut rates in Sept, it will signify that the Titanic is going under, and it will suck everything down. Retail and housing sales will truly decline as consumer hold off their purchases. The inverted yield curve will then turn positive, but remember, certain assets like stocks and Crypto’s acts as a hedge. Long & short-term trading is generally safer, allowing investors to weather market volatility. I have managed to grow a nest egg of around 100k to a decent 432k in the space of a few months... I'm especially grateful to Francine Duguay, whose deep expertise and traditional trading acumen have been invaluable in this challenging, ever-evolving financial landscape.
Francine goes deeper than just looking at surface-level trends. she explores technical, fundamental, and sentiment analysis, offering a comprehensive perspective on the market..
The key to financial stability is having the right investment suggestions for a diverse portfolio. Many investment failures and losses happen when you invest without proper guidance.
Rent control will work on a nation law level, It will certainly get large corporations out of the single family home rental market and ease homelessness. This law is a must if lawmakers don't have the brains to limit the mass purchase of homes by Hedge funds. Greed is one of the main causes of homelessness / housing cost.
Socialist alert! Very unserious advice from someone qho apparently is so little traveled they think Cheyenne, WY and Hoboken, NJ desperately need the same real extate policy, all administered by the same federal government currently maintaining open borders and proxy wars.
I think Climate Change could be the catalyst for the next black swan event in our country. In OR,WA,CA it is the wild fires. Insurance companies refusing to insure homes in moderate or high fire areas. On the coast it is hurricanes. People will simply start walking away.
A reduction in inflation reduces the amount costs increase. Deflation would be cost decreases. I thought you would know that? Unless you are purposely parroting a political talking point...
Unwatchable now with her leading the discussion. Have a lot of respect for you Ken and really enjoyed your videos and learning from you but got to unsubscribe now. I know it no big deal to you but wanted to share my comments. Good luck to you.
If you find this video valuable, please consider sharing it with someone who could benefit from it.
Your support helps our channel grow and motivates Ken to keep making videos like these. Thank you
The Fed's talk of interest rate cut leaves me pondering what stocks to buy now and when do I sell? I'm unsure how to properly allocate my money to achieve an optimal portfolio in this present economy, my goal is huge for retirement.
Navigating market volatility can be challenging, it might be beneficial consulting with an advisor to provide personalized insights based on your specific situation and financial position
No doubt, getting proper financial advice is invaluable, my portfolio is well-matched for every season of the market and just yielded a much better % from early last year. I and my advisor are working on a 7 figure ballpark goal, though this could take another year.
I’ve been looking to switch to an advisor for a while now. Any help pointing me to who your advisor is?
Annette Marie Holt has always been on the top of my list..She is regarded as a genius in her area and well knowledgeable about financial markets. I highly recommend you look her up if you want excellent collaboration.
Thanks for sharing. I curiously searched for her full name and her website popped up immediately. I looked through her credentials and did my due diligence before contacting her.
The continuously changing economic conditions in our society have made it necessary for people to find additional sources of income, thus I am looking at the stock market to fuel my retirement goal of $3m, my only concern is the recent market crash.
for majority, the solution to their problem can be found in specialized knowledge, so you can as well seek guidance from a well experienced advisor
Agreed, despite my rookie knowledge of investing, I have a financial advisor who did the trick in a bit more than 6 months after a lump sum capital of $500k, and I've so far made a fortune. I'm now buying real estates, gold and silver as advised by my FA.
I could really use the expertise of this advsors
Carol Vivian Constable is the licensed fiduciary I use. Just research the name. You’d find necessary details to work with a correspondence to set up an appointment.
Thank you for this Pointer. She seems very proficient and flexible. I booked session with her
I feel investors should be focusing on under-the-radar stocks, and considering the current rollercoaster nature of the stock market, Because 35% of my $270k portfolio comprises of plummeting stocks which were once revered and i don't know where to go here out of devastation
Safest approach i feel to tackle it is to diversify investments. By spreading investments across different asset classes, like bonds, real estate, and international stocks, they can reduce the impact of a market meltdown
A lot of folks downplay the role of advlsors until being burnt by their own emotions. I remember couple summers back, after my lengthy divorce, I needed a good boost to help my business stay afloat, hence I researched for licensed advisors and came across someone of utmost qualifications. She's helped grow my reserve notwithstanding inflation, from $275k to $850K
This is definitely considerable! think you could suggest any professional/advisors i can get on the phone with? I'm in dire need of proper portfolio allocation
Viviana Marisa Coelho is her name. She is regarded as a genius in her area and works for Empower Financial Services. By looking her up online, you can quickly verify her level of experience. She is well knowledgeable about financial markets.
She appears to be well-educated and well-read. I ran an online search on her name and came across her website; thank you for sharing.
I stopped listening the minute he said inflation is at 2.5 %. Does somebody else shop for them?
I replaced a water heater in 2018 for less than $1000, for labor and materials.
I just replaced the same water heater in 2024 for $2700, for labor and materials.
AND the 2018 one should have lasted longer than 6 years.
I just had a deck and staircase replaced for a second floor unit and it was $22,480, plus a week of hotel and meal expenses for the tenant. And now that unit needs a new heat pump for $6200.
This fall I have to replace another deck and have concrete footers and a pad poured, so that’s $31k.
Tenants have no clue how much this stuff costs (to do it right) and certainly can’t afford it themselves.
Landlord here. Honestly with over $1mio in real estate and about two thirds of that in debt I just break even each month.
It would be more efficient to sell the assets, pay off the debt, and put the difference in the bank.
The operational costs and finance costs have doubled and what was cash flow is no longer cash flow even with rent increases.
I’m honestly one more whiney text from a tenant from evicting everyone and selling up. Last week I had a tenant whine about the noise of traffic outside… the windows are all double glazed… but they said they had opened the window because it was warm indoors and now they can hear traffic… wtf am I meant to do about that?! Whiney gen-x tenants that rot the bathroom floors by leaving a sodden wet bath mat on them or flood the bath and just leave it to air dry… they don’t get that there’s an expectation on them to change their own light bulbs and if they’re going to get me to call out an electrician it’s going to have a cost.
@@josephedlin2172 same. I cash flow about $20k annually on about $1mm across 4 properties and I only raise rents when I have to spend a lot on maintenance and repairs, yet I get Boomers who retired with no savings and living on SS complaining even though they had very cheap rent while the property was wasting away, they bought newer cars than they needed and smoked. 🤷♂️
But save my username if you do ever sell. 😅
That would mean that inflation was around 17% every year for the last 6 years
Wow, what state? $2700 is pretty high
Many many things will never go down--they will hold their prices and we will have to get used to it
It's really cool that you guys do this as a couple! As always very informative!
At 63, I just don't want to own anything anymore! I just sold my house and am getting 4.28% for 3 years in a US Treasury ensuring that much of my rent payments for an apartment will be paid. I believe the long end of the curve will not be dropping and may rise with inflation in future months with the increase of Stagflation. After three years I will make new investment decisions. I just don't think the 'Duration Risk Premium" will fall from here. There are so many Black Swans in the sky that could drive up inflation, slow growth, and put us into recession. As unemployment rises, supply will rise and housing should correct. I don't trust the stock markets any longer as it's highly manipulated, concentrated, with stock buybacks, hype, and passive ETF inflows. If the Mag 7 falls, so will the indexes and employment.
Stay AWAY from bonds, or anything government.
Yes rent control resulted in less affordable supply of affordable and livable units. Rent control is counter productive.
Another example of rich people not getting it. Inflation is absolutely NOT 2%.
I'm getting financially steamrolled, I used to pay 40$ at Walmart nit too long ago, now it's closing in on 120$ .... 2% inflation 😂😅😂😅😂😅
Ken, I heard on another real estate channel that intrest rates would be lowered at a faster rate than they were raised, but you are saying the complete opposite of that. Thanks
Right on.
Thanks happiest couple in the world!
ken is spot on about fed wanting higher unemployment. he is so correct, impressive
Very helpful Thank you for sharing this
the other day I saw someone live in Phoenix for 30+ years still waiting for a crash. In his opinion the 2008 is not deep down enough. I would say for those kind of people they will never be able to brave enough to start a loan and purchase a house.
am waiting for 5 quarter rate cuts...great video.
In 301 AD, Emperor Diocletian implemented rent control in Rome through his Edict on Maximum Prices to address inflation and protect tenants from soaring rents. Although it offered temporary relief, enforcement was difficult, resulting in market distortions and a housing shortage. This happened in Rome and will more than likely happen again, reflecting the ongoing challenge of balancing tenant protection with market dynamics.
My mrtge is 2.9%. I could care less what happens in the economy. When I hit 62 Ill rent it out, and move to Uruguay and laugh at all this stress.
As long as you dont sell and make cash flow who cares about the interests 😂
You'll rent it out for dollars. What will these dollars be worth if they cut rates?
Why would the Fed change direction without a catalyst?
If people are shopping at those expensive stores and are financing it in masses, I don't feel bad for them at all when they complain that they have no money. These aren't necessities. Who buys at these stores? Millennials and Zoomers.
Basically, in order to get lower rates, we need unemployment... is the Fed saying lower r😮ates, or are they lowering the rate of change?
Asset prices and real estate are forever out of reach to the lower and middle class. .25-1% cuts dont change that. As rates fall, prices increase.
When rates are cut house prices will decrease so equity will decrease and debt will be to high. Those with to much leverage in property will be in trouble. Those with massive amounts of equity and cash will clean up. Like a lot of people done after the GFC . Those people had cash and maybe great borrowing power. Id love to see a list of people that had few properties before the GFC and cleaned up after, like George gammon. That said people that done that shouldn’t expect any difference now except you should be cashed up , NOT heavy in property and debt
This economy is trash. Real estate is gonna crash after they lower. Lowering rates is not bullish
It’s not gonna do anything anyways. This is what all of those people were warning about for years.
I have a rental for you 😊
@@legacyopp9318 keep it
Everyone who thinks prices will drop bigly are the same people who couldn’t afford when prices were low and rates were 3%.
The prices are going to tank dude...math is math
Prices have been dropping in many markets for a year now. If a seller was looking for top dollar on their home sale, they should've sold in early 2023.
@@davidmann2524The real estate industry will remain very strong.
If prices come down, all of the corporations will buy them up.
When interest rates fall, there will definitely be another rally. People would be very silly to think anything other.
@@TheAquaman1979 By the time interest rates fall to a normalized level, many are losing their jobs and their credit is shot. Homes may rally by 2030.
Personally, I use Bilt (for rent). I wish I could use it for mortgage too (I am both a renter and an landlord). I tried it and they denied the payment LOL
Thought you just were smarter. Real inflation is not 2.5. I just paid $8 for 18 eggs and 3.80 for gas.
Inflation is compounding, prices won't really go down, they'll just increase at a lower clip going forward.
🤔 Gawd damn I’m going to start selling my eggs… 😅😂
Lol I pay less in Florida for pasture raised eggs...I imagine your lying
@@brucebrucefoundation I know, right? I know where we can get 12 eggs for $2.99 (it's this magical place called Ralphs). We could do some serious egg arbitrage with these price points.
You may be looking for "de-flation". You may be very disappointed.
How can you compare government bonds to be a good deal. Whe you have 3 % inflation ,taxed on the income and no depression. You might net 1%.
I been waiting the last 18 months for this 😂😂😂😂
The FED is also feeling pressure on the national debt which is continuously rolling over.
Uour thumbnail misleading.....but you sure are right about hope being a bad strategy for investing
The Fed manipulation of interest rates (i.e., bond yields) doesn't matter. Government deficit-spending is the cause of inflation, because the Fed must monetize the government debt.
While the government is deficit-spending, the inflation rate will continue to increase, which is the secret default on the debt, including Social Security and Medicare.
"The most important thing to remember is that inflation is not an act of God, that inflation is not a catastrophe of the elements or *a disease that comes like the plague.* Inflation is a policy." -- Ludwig von Mises
No actual pivot has occurred. I'll believe it when I see it. And regardless, rate cuts are a sign of bad economic times ahead.
Did she just misspeak saying inflation hurts fixed rate debt? What did she mean with that?
kept rates low for to long created real estate mess across the board. flipper mania , big corp investors, foreign buyers. BAM pandemic and then work from home. Its great that houses are invested in , repaired made better and resold but there needs to be some kind of regulation. The generation of people trying to afford shelter is pushing up prices because companies have to compete and pay higher wages.
The losers explanation ( cash , sidelines ) was not very well elaborated upon 🤔. How is anybody sitting on cash while earning 5% a losing proposition? The money is more liquid than ever at this point , ready to move positively in many directions , isn’t it ?
1/4 point will not help anything. 3/4 may be will help some
I disagree with the winners being home buyers and construction. When you go into a recession I have yet to see construction, home buying, consumer spending etc.
The “loser” in cash is making 5% paying little taxes on that. When a recession hits and asset value falls they can take advantage of that opportunity.
More likely to see deflation than inflation. 11:57. Based on history they will cut rates fast. Just look at a chart of Fed funds.
They ain’t cutting rates. core pce is still too high. When inflation comes out in a few days you are gonna see a 0.2 jump month over month. And also once the new unemployment numbers become out you are going to see unemployment go down. When those things happen the fed will have no choice but to not cut.
It doesn't matter what percentage the Fed cuts! The Fed will continue buying government debt, and the government will continue deficit spending. And, consumers will face increasing costs across the board.
Totally agree, it's just hype and propaganda, unlikely to have a meaningful impact
Lispy
Wish Ken would keep these videos just him -
Isn’t the economy going to be cratering when they’re lowering rates? I would imagine they will not be lowering interest rates unless the economy is in big trouble and it needs them!
As an example, they started lowering interest rates during the great recession in September of 2007 They start lowering interest rates in December of 2008 just to give you a little perspective there.
The US economy is already in recession. Any rate cut will not ignite inflation. The banks will tighten even more, all consumer and corporate credit lending. This is the beginning of a deflationary period for your assets. Stocks markets will decline, and stock values disappear in a blink of the eye. Businesses will begin layoffs in earnest which will soon be reflected in the unemployment rate and unemployment claims, to further solidify the recession. In fact, when the FED cut rates in Sept, it will signify that the Titanic is going under, and it will suck everything down. Retail and housing sales will truly decline as consumer hold off their purchases. The inverted yield curve will then turn positive, but remember, certain assets like stocks and Crypto’s acts as a hedge. Long & short-term trading is generally safer, allowing investors to weather market volatility. I have managed to grow a nest egg of around 100k to a decent 432k in the space of a few months... I'm especially grateful to Francine Duguay, whose deep expertise and traditional trading acumen have been invaluable in this challenging, ever-evolving financial landscape.
Francine duguay program is widely available online..
I appreciate the professionalism and dedication of the team behind Francine's trade signal service.
Francine goes deeper than just looking at surface-level trends. she explores technical, fundamental, and sentiment analysis, offering a comprehensive perspective on the market..
The clarity and precision in Francine market predictions are astounding. I'm so grateful to have found her reviews here on TH-cam as well.
The key to financial stability is having the right investment suggestions for a diverse portfolio. Many investment failures and losses happen when you invest without proper guidance.
I am just going to wait until R/E prices COLLAPSE.
They will.
Should’ve bought in 2019/2020. Will never see 3% again.
@@thewhiteknight02 Oh I did. Made a cool 2 million on just 2 deals.
Yes, wait! The more the merrier! It will certainly, collapse, in the future. You’re definitely on a right track.
Rent control will work on a nation law level, It will certainly get large corporations out of the single family home rental market and ease homelessness.
This law is a must if lawmakers don't have the brains to limit the mass purchase of homes by Hedge funds. Greed is one of the main causes of homelessness / housing cost.
Socialist alert! Very unserious advice from someone qho apparently is so little traveled they think Cheyenne, WY and Hoboken, NJ desperately need the same real extate policy, all administered by the same federal government currently maintaining open borders and proxy wars.
let's assume for a minute that i can't afford a house, but due to rent control, nobody will rent to me because they'd lose money. where do i live?
socialism is not a solution
@@pentrubarbati Socialism is in all US policy. Please try to understand what socialism is before you post. Any regulation is socialism.
@@steve5289 you have no clue what socialism is and what cancer can come from it as me lives in an ex comunist country trust me is not fun
You can drop rates all you want real estate is going to be crickets for a LONG time.
00:39 2 1/2 ?? 2 1/2 what? Try 30% inflation
Pretty sure they re referring to the supposed current rate of inflation not the past 3-4 years of cumulative inflation...
The losers are the savers and taxpayers.
bond market to blow up after this last rally into 2025/26
I think Climate Change could be the catalyst for the next black swan event in our country.
In OR,WA,CA it is the wild fires.
Insurance companies refusing to insure homes in moderate or high fire areas.
On the coast it is hurricanes.
People will simply start walking away.
Its official? Uh.. not yet.
Hopefully they don’t lower rates. Leave them alone Otherwise inflation will just rage right back
Inflation rate/CPI and unemployment rates are all bogus. Making long-term decisions based on these bogus numbers is a bad idea.
THE BOND MARKET WILL EXPLODE if the FED Cuts as predicted.
A reduction in inflation reduces the amount costs increase. Deflation would be cost decreases. I thought you would know that? Unless you are purposely parroting a political talking point...
Unwatchable now with her leading the discussion. Have a lot of respect for you Ken and really enjoyed your videos and learning from you but got to unsubscribe now. I know it no big deal to you but wanted to share my comments. Good luck to you.
Ever watch Redacted?
Like you say to much and nothing at all. My ipinion
❤😂❤😂RENTS GOING FLAT ? 😂 LMAO 😂 BS😂$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$
We need rent control
First to comment!
Who cares about a quarter point? It does suggest which way the market is trending tho