Logos Stick said:
Lol
Labor participation rate is at 62.5%
Lowest rate since 1977.
It's been in the low 60s for 15 years. Looking at the age demographic breakdown and the introduction of AI, this number is going to get worse. Not better.
Logos Stick said:
Lol
Labor participation rate is at 62.5%
Lowest rate since 1977.
not sure it's adjusted for inflation because service costs and rates are important as well. Delinquencies may be more our concernSims said:
Is that chart available as 1)adjusted for inflation or 2)per capita?
Quote:
High interest rates and higher-than-expected costs for goods and services continue to squeeze the wallets of American consumers. This has led to many continuing to leverage their existing credit account lines more than ever. At the same time, affordability challenges for homes and automobiles, as well as growing concerns over rising debt service costs, have resulted in consumers opening fewer new credit accounts
Quote:
Delinquency rates on most credit product types have been rising from historic lows since the middle of 2021. The transition rate into delinquency remains below the pre-pandemic level for mortgages, which comprise the largest share of household debt, but auto loan and credit card delinquencies have surpassed pre-pandemic levels and continue to rise....
Even though the increase in delinquency appears to be broad based across income groups and regions, it is disproportionately driven by Millennials, those with auto or student loans, and those with relatively higher credit card balances.
True, but there's a difference between consumer spending and government spending. Furthermore, I would argue there is a difference between good spending and bad.Quote:
All the GDP growth is from spending
Old McDonald said:
by many economic indicators, the economy is strong:
-unemployment at near record lows
-wage growth outpacing inflation since march 2023
-all time high domestic oil production
-stock market near all time highs
-inflation rates cooled off significantly compared to summer 2022 highs
-strong gdp growth over the last year
-fed signaling rate cuts next year
-no recession, save for maybe 2 quarters in 2022
My main takeaway is the relationship between the red and blue lines.tysker said:
What happens to that chart as rates stay the same or increase, especially with high (5%+) inflation?
Is the flat trend casual or just correlated to the ZIRP environment and easy money policy we've had since 2008?
All your eco babble leaves out massive expansion of the money supply and debt at 145% of GDP. That is temporary fluff that is going to rot in a hurry. Just dangerous can kicking gimmicks like draining the Strategic Oil Reserve around election time. This rat infested admin is nothing but crooksOld McDonald said:sure: the tech sector has struggled in the last 18 months. my company (big tech) also had 20% layoffs last year. that's one area where the economy has not been strong recently.Tramp96 said:
Want to address a giant like Dell laying off an estimated 15-20% of their workforce since August? And many of those cannot find jobs?
And Dell is not the only one.
I think we're on the same page. Debt can be a slow death that hits you all at once. Like many aspects of finance, it can be an escalator up and an elevator down.Sims said:My main takeaway is the relationship between the red and blue lines.tysker said:
What happens to that chart as rates stay the same or increase, especially with high (5%+) inflation?
Is the flat trend casual or just correlated to the ZIRP environment and easy money policy we've had since 2008?
While total debt does increase (blue), total debt as a function of disposable income is fairly flat (meaning disposal income increased). I think this is just indicative of consumer management of their own credit indebtedness. I'm definitely not trying to disprove the notion that credit card debt is at an all time high and by all accounts appears to be poised as a significant headwind to consumer spending. I was just pointing out that I think it may be wrong to say any time before the very near past should be the starting point for where we start to measure a breaking point. I would say consumers were comfortable with credit card debt probably up until very recently...to your point, serviceability is becoming a big issue...but a recent one.
Consumer credit debt is at a record high.tysker said:I think we're on the same page. Debt can be a slow death that hits you all at once. Like many aspects of finance, it can be an escalator up and an elevator down.Sims said:My main takeaway is the relationship between the red and blue lines.tysker said:
What happens to that chart as rates stay the same or increase, especially with high (5%+) inflation?
Is the flat trend casual or just correlated to the ZIRP environment and easy money policy we've had since 2008?
While total debt does increase (blue), total debt as a function of disposable income is fairly flat (meaning disposal income increased). I think this is just indicative of consumer management of their own credit indebtedness. I'm definitely not trying to disprove the notion that credit card debt is at an all time high and by all accounts appears to be poised as a significant headwind to consumer spending. I was just pointing out that I think it may be wrong to say any time before the very near past should be the starting point for where we start to measure a breaking point. I would say consumers were comfortable with credit card debt probably up until very recently...to your point, serviceability is becoming a big issue...but a recent one.
I think there are lots of people spending more than they can now, knowing prices are just going to go up, which is why the economy has an underlying quality. People live that YOLO life and don't care about when the bill is due.
there are plenty of people whose perception of the economy essentially boils down to whether the party they identify with is in office. those people are unserious and can be ignored on the subject.AggieVictor10 said:
Counterpoint: dem is in office and dems are undoubtedly bad
For the economy.
Opalka said:
Always blaming the "MSM" for something you don't like won't cut it. I read MarketWatch most days, and they report on what ECONOMISTS say. Now if you want to say that most economists are "in on the lies", go for it. I don't know where you get more reliable information, but going to the grocery store and complaining about the price that manufacturers and retailers charge isn't about "the economy". They want to keep their profits as high as possible, so don't look for them to rush to lower their prices. Meanwhile, the stock market is great, people still are buying big ticket items like cars, and the unemployment rate is low. Gas is also below $3 in most of the country. If you still want to be a negative Nancy about the economy, go for it.
as a percentage of the working population, this is approximately in line with what it's been for the last 30 yearsLogos Stick said:
8.7 million Americans, a record high, hold multiple jobs to make ends meet
YepLogos Stick said:Opalka said:
Always blaming the "MSM" for something you don't like won't cut it. I read MarketWatch most days, and they report on what ECONOMISTS say. Now if you want to say that most economists are "in on the lies", go for it. I don't know where you get more reliable information, but going to the grocery store and complaining about the price that manufacturers and retailers charge isn't about "the economy". They want to keep their profits as high as possible, so don't look for them to rush to lower their prices. Meanwhile, the stock market is great, people still are buying big ticket items like cars, and the unemployment rate is low. Gas is also below $3 in most of the country. If you still want to be a negative Nancy about the economy, go for it.
LOL, here ya go:
Initial US employment reports overstated by 439,000 jobs in 2023
8.7 million Americans, a record high, hold multiple jobs to make ends meet
https://www.foxbusiness.com/economy/initial-us-employment-reports-overstated-jobs
YepBadMoonRisin said:
checking in here. sadly. feb.
its brutal out there.
the total may be at an all time high (because inflation + population growth), but debt payments as a percent of people's disposable income is pretty normal compared to the last 40 yearssamurai_science said:
Americans' credit card debt hits a record $1 trillion
https://www.forbes.com/sites/forbesfinancecouncil/2023/10/24/americans-now-have-1-trillion-in-credit-card-debt-heres-why/?sh=1fd47a4d65a1
Credit card debt has grown to an all-time high, recently surpassing then-record levels observed before the Covid-19 pandemic. In the latest numbers from the New York Federal Reserve, total consumer credit debt exceeded $1.03 trillion, compared to $806 billion pre-pandemic. Consumers today are navigating inflation, rising interest rates, an end to pandemic-related stimulus checks and lenders taking a more risk-averse approach to personal and small-business loans.
We laid off a number of IT employees.samurai_science said:
https://www.msn.com/en-us/money/careers/us-employment-reports-greatly-exaggerated-over-400-000-jobs-mistakenly-added-to-total/ar-AA1mDpMj?cvid=96168676ee6b47d58266baefc9680e10&ei=18
https://nypost.com/2024/01/06/business/initial-us-employment-reports-overstated-by-439000-jobs-in-2023/
Initial US employment reports overstated by 439,000 jobs in 2023
Maybe all the folks who think this is a great economy should quit their jobs and look for better opportunities.BadMoonRisin said:
checking in here. sadly. feb.
its brutal out there.