Silv getting hammered, but looking at the charts it still looks highCan anyone clarify why gold, and silver took a hit yesterday?
Usually precious metals move differently than the market.
Silv getting hammered, but looking at the charts it still looks highCan anyone clarify why gold, and silver took a hit yesterday?
Usually precious metals move differently than the market.
Could be a number of reasons.Can anyone clarify why gold, and silver took a hit yesterday?
Usually precious metals move differently than the market.
I am not sure what to do now. I would prefer to have more cash going into the weekend. Down 1% today. Literally flat yesterday after many moves. So I need to sell both my longs and my hedges or I’ll be exposed on one side or the other.I got a ping at 6:20 AM that I got TSLA and as soon as I grabbed the phone I was down $480. And 1 minute later I was down $1400 and later I was up $365 so I flipped it and a few minutes later bought it back for about $3 less a share and now I am on hold... crazy days continue.
Then how do you explain the roughly 50% of vehicles sold in the USA that have a final assembly point in the USA? Presumably vehicles and at least some vehicle parts can be manufactured profitably in the USA, because it's already currently being done. Tires and car batteries also come to mind.If a good cannot be sold for a profit it won't be manufactured. Shareholders want a return on their investment.
I am not sure what to do now. I would prefer to have more cash going into the weekend. Down 1% today. Literally flat yesterday after many moves. So I need to sell both my longs and my hedges or I’ll be exposed on one side or the other.
I like this statement.Capitalism and competition, exactly. The drive to lower prodution costs of goods/services moved manufacturing offshore/elsewhere, to repatriate factories back can only cause costs to skyrocket. Question is will the consumer want to pay for this?
Seems pretty simple to me. The European Union, who are supposed to be our friends and live or our military budget also tax the heck out of our products
I could be wrong, but I firmly believe it’s somewhere in between our two statementsYeah no we don't. We add VAT on everything, regardless of origin.
Anything outside EU also has to pay toll fee. Unless there is a trade agreement.
I could be wrong, but I firmly believe it’s somewhere in between our two statements
Because Cramer said it I am almost obligated to go bottom fishing.
I could be wrong, but I firmly believe it’s somewhere in between our two statements
Exactly. Rates tend rise in inflationary times.I wonder if people thought there was a shot at Powell cutting rates today? I knew that wasn't going to happen.
Not complete.If there is, it is universal and not specific for USA.
You are assuming there is sufficient margin to absorb the increased cost to manufacture. Some products have that, others do not.Then how do you explain the roughly 50% of vehicles sold in the USA that have a final assembly point in the USA? Presumably vehicles and at least some vehicle parts can be manufactured profitably in the USA, because it's already currently being done. Tires and car batteries also come to mind.
Or were you implying that those $100,000 pickup trucks that are made in Mexico and sold in USA can't be made in USA and sold profitably in USA at their current prices? I suspect that they can be made in USA and sold in USA at their current prices, because it's already being done by other manufacturers, and when Toyota moved truck production from Texas to Mexico, they didn't lower the price.
I expect pricing to remain relatively the same, but profitability to shrink. Wall Street seems to agree with me.
The price you pay for almost anything is literally what the maximum the provider thinks you are going to pay, and has little to do with the cost.
Not complete.
For example when you export you don’t pay a VAT.
Also US manufacturers pay payroll and many state and local taxes. In Europe the VAT covers many of those things. So the playing field is tilted to off -shore in the U.S. not do in Europe.
I would be fine with a U.S. VAT but constitutionally we cannot have one.
AG, there is no fair. Capitalism is about winners and losers.I like this statement.
I’m reading through many posts in here and maybe overthinking it a bit?
What we want is level playing field.
Stop slapping tariffs on our merchandise overseas and will stop slapping tariffs on their products coming here.
They still will have an advantage because lower labor cost overseas however, what we’re asking for is to stop taxing American products when they come into foreign countries
Seems pretty simple to me. If I stand corrected besides China, India is pretty bad at taxing our products. The European Union, who are supposed to be our friends and live off our tax dollars and our military budget also tax the heck out of our products.
I wonder who will cave first. I’m sure the stock market is putting enormous pressure on politicians here, but I guess it is what it is.
If I had money on the side, I would be buying into some quality companies right now that’s for sure.
I’m holding what I got which is thank goodness rock solid stable Walmart, Meta, which I almost lost all my profit in, will still be good someday the world’s advertising platform and last, but not least Amazon. Amazon cloud services are more important than their retail business, but I find it hard to believe their retail business will suffer much because people are gonna buy things no matter what and Amazon will always do it cheaper.
Anyway, my thoughts for the day, got the lawn cut and now it’s time to play pickleball![]()