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Blake Hampton

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Everything posted by Blake Hampton

  1. "In a strange turn of events, the president seems to have added another 10 percent tariff to Canada and Mexico. Asked earlier if the 10 percent tariff extended to those countries, Scott Bessent, the treasury secretary, said that it did. And a White House official clarified for me just now that that was the case. Previously, Canada and Mexico had been exempted from this round of “reciprocal” tariffs, though they still faced a 25 percent tariff on many of their goods that the president imposed last month." Nice.
  2. Reciprocal tariffs on all countries besides China paused for 90 days. 10% tariffs for all countries stick, China now has a tariff of 125%.
  3. You seem upset.
  4. Oh also, the 10% flat rate is $290 billion on $2.9 trillion of good imports from countries besides China. That is $290 B + $550 B = $840 B of tariffs coming, around $6,300 per U.S. household. Maybe better geopolitically, but essentially a nothing-burger when considering tariffs. Edit: these are based on 2024 import figures. 2025 is likely to be more.
  5. The former Citigroup chief executive infamously said in July 2007, referring to the firm's leveraged lending practices: “When the music stops, in terms of liquidity, things will be complicated. But as long as the music is playing, you've got to get up and dance. We're still dancing.” - NYT
  6. I'm convinced the S&P is the new meme stock.
  7. S&P 500 is up nearly 7%. Bananas.
  8. In 2024, the United States imported approximately $440 billion in goods from China. A 125% tariff on all those goods is $550 billion, around $4,200 per U.S. household.
  9. This is an incredible analogy.
  10. You're correct. Maybe I just feel more passionate about things as a younger person. I don't have that much capital to really take advantage, and a lot of this has an outsized effect on me because it's my future. As an investor, I'm excited. But as an American, I'm outraged.
  11. Am I? What exactly is there to be positive about? I'm long-term bullish on the United States, which I think you almost have to be, but what has happened in the recent past is unbelievable in stupidity and excess. We elected a FELON as our president. A man that has cheated on all his wives, encouraged an insurrection attempt, committed fraud and possibly rape, and overall is just a terrible human being. Our banks have lent stupidly, markets generally are the most overvalued in history, Treasury markets are screwed up, our fiscal deficit and national debt are at record levels, and Congress has checked out. This stuff has consequences, and markets can change fast. They don't give a flying fuck how you feel, what you think, or how intimidating you are. It's a game that revolves around knowledge and long-term thinking. And our country has been thinking and acting fucking stupid.
  12. MOVE index is almost where it was in 2020 with a treasury market that has increased by $8 trillion. This is the first day. Wait until we have a bad inflation reading.
  13. "Long-term interest rates are gapping up, even as the stock market moves sharply downwards. This highly unusual pattern suggests a generalized aversion to US assets in global financial markets. We are being treated by global financial markets like a problematic emerging market."
  14. You guys aren't looking at the real problem here which is the Treasury market.
  15. It's funny cause I was a pretty disruptive kid who used to get in trouble a lot. I don't appeal to authority; I appeal to those I perceive as brilliant. They're not wrong; they're just early.
  16. So you're saying Jamie Dimon, Warren Buffett, and Prem Watsa are all wrong then?
  17. I don't know, you tell me.
  18. Oil can certainly cause inflation, and oil has also done well during inflation historically. It's a real asset that markets flood into when the purchasing power of their money really gets in question. We're not there yet but we will be. The dollar is currently weakening alongside extreme volatility in Treasury markets. Nothing about this is normal.
  19. Another day in paradise. Just remember that inflation is coming.
  20. Today: "Bessent pointed to comments by a Spanish policymaker this week entertaining closer ties to China. “That would be cutting your own throat,” he said." Bessent wrote an op-ed in the WSJ last year, where he denounced—and actually insulted—economists for thinking “Trump’s economic agenda would be disastrous for the U.S.” Ever since then I’ve thought he's a prick. This is exactly the sort of rhetoric that’s going to destroy what little goodwill our country has left. Irony is a bitch. WSJ Op-Ed: Markets Hail Trump’s Economics - Nov. 10, 2024 "Twenty-three Nobel laureates in economics warned two weeks ago that Donald Trump’s economic agenda would be disastrous for the U.S. Immediately after Mr. Trump’s landslide victory, financial markets showed they vehemently disagree. Let’s hope none of the Nobel laureates adjusted their retirement portfolios; otherwise their 401(k)s may be suffering as badly as their reputations. Asset prices are fickle, and long-term economic performance is the ultimate measuring stick. But recent days prove markets’ unambiguous embrace of the Trump 2.0 economic vision. Markets are signaling expectations of higher growth, lower volatility and inflation, and a revitalized economy for all Americans. Mr. Trump’s election drove the largest single-day increase in the U.S. dollar in more than two years, and third largest in the last decade. This is a vote of confidence in U.S. leadership internationally and in the dollar as the world’s reserve currency. The Russell 2000, an index of small-capitalization stocks, also rose by the most in two years due to investor expectations that the Trump economy will disproportionately benefit smaller businesses. An exchange-traded fund that tracks the Russell 2000 index saw its largest single-day inflow in 17 years. The rally in equities was particularly unusual given that interest rates also moved higher. The combination of the steepening yield curve, stable inflation expectations and the rise in stocks indicates that markets expect the Trump agenda to foster noninflationary growth that will drive private investment. Even amid the expected pro-growth agenda and the associated increased demand for energy, the price of oil fell. Energy stocks rallied at the same time, signaling expectations of more energy production and geopolitical stability. While markets expect a reinvigorated American economy, the Biden administration’s mismanagement has created serious challenges that Mr. Trump will need to overcome. Economic growth has been propped up by the out-of-control federal deficit, which hit 7% of gross domestic product last year. Mr. Trump has a mandate to reprivatize the U.S. economy through deregulation and tax reform to spur the supply-side growth that he delivered in his first term. That will be essential to restarting the American growth engine, reducing inflationary pressures, and addressing the debt burden from four years of reckless spending. The U.S. economy also faces the consequences of the Biden administration’s distortion of capital allocation. U.S. competitiveness has been weakened by destructive energy policies and the channeling of investment toward a quixotic energy transition and semiconductor fabrication plants subject to government mandates that render them uneconomic. Mr. Trump will deliver a renaissance in American energy investment and ensure that trade is free and fair, supporting long-term U.S. competitiveness. Allowing the private sector rather than the government to allocate capital is crucial to growth. The U.S. must reform the Inflation Reduction Act’s distortionary incentives that encourage unproductive investment, which has to be sustained by a lifetime of subsidies. Overhauling the regulatory and supervisory environment will encourage more lending and reinvigorate banks. Mr. Trump must also address government borrowing. U.S. interest expense exceeds the defense budget. Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen has distorted Treasury markets by borrowing more than $1 trillion in more-expensive shorter-term debt compared with historical norms. Terming out that debt in favor of a more orthodox borrowing profile may increase longer-term interest rates and will need to be deftly handled. The only way to return to a prudent borrowing strategy without upsetting financial markets is restoring investors’ faith in the economy and preserving the dollar’s global role. The failure of Bidenomics is clear. But Mr. Trump has turned around the economy before, and he is ready to do so again. Twenty-three Nobel laureates might not understand this, but the financial markets have clearly spoken."
  21. This has to be one of the weirdest markets ever. Specifically, the treasury market volatility is insane.
  22. I would say a lot of us are repetitive. I know I am.
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