Money & Economics

Most people consider their home value as a large part of their net worth. Equity in same is used for loans etc.

$100K for mobile homes? LOL I've looked at 2 recently over $200K, A buddy owns one he bought a few years ago for $289K over in Sarasota. Waterfront on lakes or saltwater jacks it up a bunch. Depends greatly on location and age much like regular homes. Florida has more than any other state by far I think.
Our daughter just bought 15 acres. We went with her to look at modular homes where the company will deliver the home for you. Wow, wow, is all I can say, she looked at 2000-3000 sq. ft., $350-$500k for a modular home??? crazy...
 
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My comment about using caution to compare gold prices in other countries was prompted by this post, which has a couple of very big holes in it:

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China imposes a 13% VAT on gold purchases. There is a mechanism for it to be refunded when the gold is not purchased for retail sale. This next screen shot is from a site that quotes Shanghai exchange gold with and without VAT:

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Notice the quote with VAT is 13% higher.

Whoever made up this post thought he/she was being really careful to get same-time quotes, except these quotes were 5 hours apart. Carelessness, or good click bait thinking nobody would notice?

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Leads me to my broken-record statement that you can't believe anything on the Internet without first vetting or confirming it.
Sorry about the 2 attachments to the post. I don't know how I did that, or how to get rid of them.
 

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My comment about using caution to compare gold prices in other countries was prompted by this post, which has a couple of very big holes in it:

View attachment 237286

China imposes a 13% VAT on gold purchases. There is a mechanism for it to be refunded when the gold is not purchased for retail sale. This next screen shot is from a site that quotes Shanghai exchange gold with and without VAT:

View attachment 237287

Notice the quote with VAT is 13% higher.

Whoever made up this post thought he/she was being really careful to get same-time quotes, except these quotes were 5 hours apart. Carelessness, or good click bait thinking nobody would notice?

View attachment 237288 View attachment 237291

Leads me to my broken-record statement that you can't believe anything on the Internet without first vetting or confirming it.
Sorry about the 2 attachments to the post. I don't know how I did that, or how to get rid of them.

For sure

...or TV or the newspaper or radio....

Point being is that now we HAVE an option to fact check. Of course the problem there is we have to use that damn Interwebs to do it! :rofl:
 
It started yesterday.

Tuesday Gold was moving fast, I picked up some #GLD after having sold Friday.
(The #GLD ETF is about 10% the price of spot Gold, plus the ETF takes a tiny sliver.)

So I grabbed some Tuesday just before close at $474 and held on Wednesday debating whether to sell as it was hovering about $480 most of the day, I was looking for it to start to dip and sell and instead right before close it went parabolic. Runaway train. I stared at it rising with my mouth open until about 7pm. When it it hit $512 (About $5525 Spot price?) I started for the Sell button assuming (correctly) that it would dump back down today. Prices were jumping back and forth in $5 increments in seconds for a while.
It took me a whole 30 seconds to put the order together and mash the sell button, in that time it dropped to $506. So a profit of $32 p/share. Rare that you can get lucky and time it right, I slept good ;)

So today it opened at $5560 or so and the ETF about $508 but it was already dropping from overnight contracts. I didnt buy back in, just didnt feel right.. At about 10am it dumped hard along with Silver. Like down to $5190 or so, heading towards a $400 drop in 30 minutes.

Both (Gold and Silver) selloffs today had to have been coordinated. Many guesses as to who but likely a big bank. Someone big is still short a lot in gold/silver.
The relentless buying today like other recent dips mostly filled the gap back to about $5470 ish

This has been going on with Silver regularly since December. Any big moves, it gets away from them, and they short it and dump it to get temporary control of the price. But buying volume just eats it right back up. Never seen anything like it

To your price spread question:
I dont think the spread was manipulated, just a timing thing catching up. Mostly a paper gold vs physical gold temporary difference and time zones.

Dollar is getting hammered down. Gold sees that, its the canary in the coal mine.. But Trump and Bessent have made it clear in recent days they don;t mind a weak dollar and are encouraging it. It will should help exports and therefore jobs in theory and make imports more expensive. Even if it does also reduce the value of your money....ooppss double edge sword.

I'm not smart enough to go deeper but I think there's a bigger game at play.

.. but I think there's a bigger game at play.

yes, wondering about the bigger game here also

I highly suspect there is an USA vs China economic war angle here somehow, as well as China's allies Russia, Iran ..

If China is holding a ton of US Dollars, as it gets from USA trade .. and the dollar drops in value and gold and other metals go up, and oil is low .. how does this affect China and their plan to take Taiwan ?

Gold if Russia gets paid in gold, one Kg a gold sure buys a ton more oil from Russia now .. so Russia will make even less money if paid by gold now.

some more advanced chess moves going on right now while everyone watches ICE
 
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.. but I think there's a bigger game at play.

yes, wondering about the bigger game here also
Me too.

It would be easy to say that this recent big jump in gold/silver prices was just catching up from the many years of price suppression. With the prices going up this much, this fast, I can't help thinking there's something big coming. I'm not smart enough to know what it is. With Trump saying he wants house prices to go up, that could signal big inflation coming, with the rationalization about everything else also going up being something like "but look how much equity you have in your home now". Just a wild guess, I know nothing.
 
Me too.

It would be easy to say that this recent big jump in gold/silver prices was just catching up from the many years of price suppression. With the prices going up this much, this fast, I can't help thinking there's something big coming. I'm not smart enough to know what it is. With Trump saying he wants house prices to go up, that could signal big inflation coming, with the rationalization about everything else also going up being something like "but look how much equity you have in your home now". Just a wild guess, I know nothing.

Data points:

Gold, Silver, Copper, Platinum, pick a metal. Rare earths, minerals, now Oil.
Natural resources, fundamental materials… demand for all rising at rapid pace

Trump overtly grabbing up same. Upsetting 75 years of doing it quietly. (Venezuela, Greenland, Canada, Iran)

Dollar crashing and the Administration doesn’t seem to care.

Trump announcing that the old fiat monetary system is dead and that we’re going to move to crypto. (While his family and associates are investing bigly in it and the entire market is being held up by the promise.)

Inflation is wayyyyy higher than being reported

Big tech companies quarterly reports show unsustainable capex with little return now getting killed.

Housing. Prices still to high to sell. Nobody is buying unless they absolutely have to.

Energy, Health care, Food, and the bottom feeders (Insurance) all at or close to stupid highs and still increasing.

.Gov back to printing money bigly

Gold became the #1 foreign reserve recently (have to check that) US Treasuries no longer appealing

Japan Yen crashing a preview of the $dollar

Trump last night lashing out at Mexico and Canada threatening severe tariffs if they don’t do business his way. Same with Europe 2 weeks ago, who at least temporarily put him in check on Greenland. He’s a loose canon. But not the only factor. He’s exasperating/accelerating the bigger problems. Repercussions are real.

There’s a global race to keep the air from escaping the balloon.

Down here at ground level I have a bad feeling about the markets. Like 2000 or 2008 feeling. The markets were VERY weird the past 48 hours. Nowhere to hide yesterday, all sectors spooky. I’m dumping my remaining exposure at 8am. (SCHD, normally a quiet slow moving, sleepy, safe dividend fund.)

Good luck to all. Hopefully it will be just another Friday and once my coffee wears off it will all be fine
 
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Opinion:​

Why Trump would actually welcome higher inflation — and the new Fed chair could make it happen​







Trump exposes the U.S. to massive risks, including inflation, market volatility and an accelerating decline in dollar dominance.
If there is one song that captures President Donald Trump’s vision for the U.S. economy in 2026, it is Buster Poindexter’s 1987 cover of Montserratian musician Arrow’s “Hot Hot Hot,” with its line about “party people all around me.” That, at least, was the unmistakable vibe emanating from Trump’s entourage at the World Economic Forum’s annual meeting earlier this month.

Trump and his team arrived in Davos with a bullish message. Massive fiscal stimulus — both continuing and newly promised under the administration’s One Big Beautiful Bill Act — will soon be reinforced by a sharp increase in U.S. defense spending and possibly even a fresh round of COVID-19-style $2,000 checks for most Americans. Biden-era regulations will be rolled back aggressively, and a new Federal Reserve chair, chosen for his willingness to deliver multiple interest-rate cuts, will be installed.

Taken together, we were told, these policies will push U.S. GDP growth to 4% to 5%, perhaps even 6%. Better still, inflation will continue to fall, mortgage rates will decline and everyone will live happily ever after.

While this scenario is not impossible, it is highly unlikely. AI may boost U.S. productivity, though only at the modest annual rate of around 0.5%. Similarly, deregulation can generate meaningful short-term gains, and Europe could certainly benefit from more of it — as Trump emphasized repeatedly at Davos, when he wasn’t hurling personal insults at European leaders. But these supply-side effects fall well short of what would be needed to raise near-term growth by several percentage points.



If Trump and his new Fed chair prioritize rapid growth over price stability, inflation is likely to linger near 3% and drift toward 4%.
Conversely, unleashing massive fiscal stimulus on an economy, especially one in which labor-force growth has been curtailed by restrictive immigration policies, is inevitably going to push demand beyond supply, stoking inflation. In such an environment, long-term interest rates are more likely to rise than fall as investors seek compensation for inflation risks.

Barring a major negative shock, the surge in demand will boost short-term growth, but inflation is notoriously “sticky.” Firms and households revise their inflation expectations slowly, and because prices are not adjusted simultaneously, competitive pressures limit how quickly any one business can respond. Contrary to popular belief, even hyperinflation typically takes years, not months, to develop.

That said, if Trump and his new Fed chair prioritize rapid growth over price stability, inflation is likely to linger near 3% and drift toward 4% by late 2027 rather than fall to 2%, as the International Monetary Fund projected in the latest update to its World Economic Outlook.

Of course, a major negative shock — a new pandemic, a financial crisis or, more plausibly, a stock-market correction — could derail this high-growth, high-inflation scenario. And a cyber conflict or full-scale war that leads to a surge in defense spending on top of an already overheated economy would be even more destabilizing.

Given how unpopular inflation is with voters, why is Trump willing to take this risk? Perhaps he genuinely believes that the supply-side gains from AI and deregulation will be enormous, while the supply-side costs of his tariffs will be minimal, allowing output to expand enough to meet higher demand. If so, his more pragmatic economic advisers should have pushed back.

One suspects, however, that Trump understands perfectly well what happens when demand persistently outpaces supply, and believes the prospect of a short-term economic boost ahead of November’s midterm elections is worth the risk. From his perspective, inflation may be politically damaging, but an overwhelming Democratic victory that impedes his ability to impose his agenda would be far worse.


To be sure, the U.S. economy performed quite well during Trump’s first year back in office, and he can hardly be faulted for boasting about it. But his claims — most notably, his oft-repeated claim that he inherited a “terrible” economy from former President Joe Biden — are wildly exaggerated. When Trump spoke at Davos last year, during the first week of his second presidency, America’s dynamism was already the envy of the world. That success did not materialize overnight.

Despite the U.S. economy’s strong performance in 2025, which is likely to continue in 2026 — maybe even becoming red-hot — it is hard to escape the conclusion that in the medium term, Trump’s decisions over the past year will expose the U.S. to massive risks, including inflation, market volatility and an accelerating decline in dollar dominance. These include his expansionary fiscal policy, attempts to bully the Fed into cutting interest rates, and rapid financial deregulation — not to mention his blatant corruption and repeated abuses of executive power.

Centuries of experience across dozens of countries suggest that the kind of heterodox experiment now underway in the U.S. rarely ends well in the long run. To borrow once more from “Hot Hot Hot,” a “fundamental jam” is all but assured.

Kenneth Rogoff, a former chief economist of the International Monetary Fund, is professor of economics and public policy at Harvard University and the recipient of the 2011 Deutsche Bank Prize in Financial Economics. He is the co-author (with Carmen M. Reinhart) of “This Time is Different: Eight Centuries of Financial Folly” (Princeton University Press, 2011) and the author of “Our Dollar, Your Problem” (Yale University Press, 2025).
 
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Though likely an unpopular opinion, I DO worry about what Billionaires worry about...

What's Worrying Billionaires The Most In 2026?​


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FWIW I think HSBC is one of the if not the biggest bank upside down on the precious metals trade. Big time upside down
 
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Today got the price Product Price Adjustment Noticee from dahua, the chips, DDR price is going out off control, camera price have to increase 20%, that is too crazy.
Micron price from 64 to 410 now for only 11 months!

View attachment 237176
Thank you Andy for the heads up on the price increase...

Time to buy some Cameras Boys...:)

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Yes,i am very sad, but you guys buy more micron, WD, Seagate stocks, will be always good, as i know the shortage of the DDR can't solve in 1 year.
For me it worked in my favor, this increase got me approval from the wife to buy more cameras :) Timing was perfect, she wants a new over-the-range microwave air fryer/convection oven, haha, which I of course approved ;)

Happy Wife, Happy Life!!!