- Joined
- Aug 21, 2018
- Messages
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It seems strange that we spend so much time and effort screening people who aren’t a risk vs paying little or no attention to those who aren’t a higher risk and seeking to come into the US en masse, undocumented and often illegally.
Sounds like we need smarter, more updated and evidence-based methods for screening people coming into the US.
"Wall Street, the dollar and long-dated Treasuries all tanked on Monday, and investors are bracing for further volatility.
Gold, the yen and key European currencies all rose sharply.
Investors are understandably spooked.
Economist Phil Suttle says the twin selloff in Treasuries and the dollar suggest U.S. markets are "giving off distinct emerging market tendencies," while Callie Cox at Ritholtz Wealth Management notes that U.S. markets are on the cusp of a cross-asset drop not seen for 35 years."
"Wall Street, the dollar and long-dated Treasuries all tanked on Monday, and investors are bracing for further volatility.
Gold, the yen and key European currencies all rose sharply.
Investors are understandably spooked.
Economist Phil Suttle says the twin selloff in Treasuries and the dollar suggest U.S. markets are "giving off distinct emerging market tendencies," while Callie Cox at Ritholtz Wealth Management notes that U.S. markets are on the cusp of a cross-asset drop not seen for 35 years."
Nobody knows more than Trump about being Pope.I wonder if DJT is toying with the idea of becoming Pope?
King, king. Evil king.Nobody knows more than Trump about being Pope.
Only I can fix it!Nobody knows more than Trump about being Pope.
An interesting situation. If China is going to cancel all orders for Boeing aircraft, that really only leaves Airbus and Brazil's Embraer producing large commercial aircraft at scale. However, it is reported that China is developing its own commercial aircraft production capabilities so maybe they will try to accelerate their own programme.A Boeing 737 Max 8 plane intended for use by a Chinese airline returned to the US on Monday from Boeing’s China finishing centre
Yeah, their safety record hasn't been great in recent years.An interesting situation. If China is going to cancel all orders for Boeing aircraft, that really only leaves Airbus and Brazil's Embraer producing large commercial aircraft at scale. However, it is reported that China is developing its own commercial aircraft production capabilities so maybe they will try to accelerate their own programme.
It will be interesting to see if order cancellations spread to other buyers. Cancelling orders rather than imposing reciprocal tariffs may be an alternative way for other countries to hit the US in the pocket as well as significantly shrinking Boeing as an international player in the commercial aircraft market.
Then, of course, there also seem to be concerns over quality control at Boeing at present. Maybe another reason to rethink orders for Boeing aircraft.
A tariffs-related story from the Mail. Pepsi moved their concentrate production to Ireland to benefit from lower corporate taxes and will now be hit by tariffs. Coca Cola kept their concentrate production in the US so won't.
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Coke v Pepsi soda wars take a twist under Trump's tariffs
Trump's tariffs have created a new factor in the long-standing cola wars.www.dailymail.co.uk
Maybe I'm misunderstanding the situation, but surely Pepsi will need to pay a tariff of 10% (currently) to import concentrate from Ireland into the US, which will ultimately either need to be absorbed by the company when pricing the finished product for sale within the US, or increase the sale price by the amount of the tariff. This should increase any price differential between Pepsi and Coca Cola on the shelf at home and make Pepsi less attractive on price.This will benefit the US domestic market, but will be a liability for the export market where countries around the world are boycotting US made products, or where they face retaliatory tariffs.
Remember back in 2020, when Covid caused everyone to stop sailing happily around the world? (but not me, because I never began - cruises just don't appeal to me). So the cruise industry came to a grinding halt, and I don't know how many cruise liners were scrapped. Can it be possible that in 2025, in some hideous uncanny Part 2, the same is going to happen to the aviation world?An interesting situation. If China is going to cancel all orders for Boeing aircraft, that really only leaves Airbus and Brazil's Embraer producing large commercial aircraft at scale. However, it is reported that China is developing its own commercial aircraft production capabilities so maybe they will try to accelerate their own programme.
It will be interesting to see if order cancellations spread to other buyers. Cancelling orders rather than imposing reciprocal tariffs may be an alternative way for other countries to hit the US in the pocket as well as significantly shrinking Boeing as an international player in the commercial aircraft market.
Then, of course, there also seem to be concerns over quality control at Boeing at present. Maybe another reason to rethink orders for Boeing air6thcraft.
I don't see the demand for consumer aviation and passenger jets decreasing much in the foreseeable future, whatever the climate lobby may demand.Remember back in 2020, when Covid caused everyone to stop sailing happily around the world? (but not me, because I never began - cruises just don't appeal to me). So the cruise industry came to a grinding halt, and I don't know how many cruise liners were scrapped. Can it be possible that in 2025, in some hideous uncanny Part 2, the same is going to happen to the aviation world?