09/22/2021 Today
David Eifrig, American Consequences You want to outlive your hard-earned nest egg. Otherwise, you could get yanked out of early retirement to become a Walmart greeter. |
Paul Katzeff, Investor's How Do Your Savings Compare To People's Your Age? |
Christoph Gisiger, The Market Anne Stevenson-Yang, China expert and founder of J Capital Research, comments on the crisis surrounding the teetering real estate colossus Evergrande, recent regulatory interventions against tech giants such as Alibaba and Tencent, and the overall economic state of the People's Republic. |
John Tamny, RCM "The Oreo was my introduction to American food culture, and I loved the cookie instantly and fiercely - from the crinkling sound of the plastic packaging; to the frosting, sweeter than anything I'd ever tasted; to the impossibly dark, intricately embossed biscuits, which tasted only vaguely of chocolate." Those are the words of Tejal Rao, a food reporter for the New York Times. They're a reminder of what "America" signifies to the rest of the world. Rao's first taste of an Oreo was more than just biting into a cookie, for him it was "about consuming something American, something cool and rare... |
Joel Kotkin & Cullum Clark, Dallas News Located on the Southern Plains, far from America's coasts and great river systems, the Dallas-Fort Worth metropolitan area epitomizes the new trends in... |
Andrew Wilford, RCM Few corporate activities receive more ire from the left than share repurchase programs, commonly known as stock buybacks. Senators Ron Wyden and Sherrod Brown recently attempted to capitalize on this progressive angst to fund a small part of Democrats' enormous $3.5 trillion legislative package by inserting a 2 percent excise tax on buybacks into the bill. While this will likely prove popular among the Democratic base, the dislike for buybacks is entirely unfounded. |
Laura Entis, Vox From April to the end of July, nearly 16 million Americans quit their jobs. What does it mean for the jobs recovery? |
Vijay Jayaraj, RCM Much of the media is reporting on what may be actual anxiety over climate change after ginning up fear of a climate apocalypse with false stories and exaggerated claims. "Activists ‘born into the climate crisis' face another challenge: Fear of the future," was the headline for a Sept. 16 Washington Post article. "Young people coming of age in an era of climate disasters are trying to channel anxiety about the planet flooding and burning," according to the writer. The article is probably accurate in reporting about a fear among some young people, but rather than noting that the... |
Simon Watkins, OilPrice The threat of Iran blockading the Strait of Hormuz has increased since it completed the Jask hub, but a capacity expansion in the Fujairah oil hub could counter that |
Paul Krugman, New York Times Coal's glory days ended during the Reagan era, and they aren't coming back. |
Henry Grabar, Slate Tourists may not need these rooms right now, but another group does. |
Thomas Kahn, The Hill Significantly reducing the size of the tax plan would lead to one of two bad outcomes. |
Brad McMillan, Commonwealth Is Evergrande just another corporate bankruptcy or something more? Commonwealth CIO Brad McMillan examines the risks for China and the world markets. |
Lee Bohl, Charles Schwab Make sure you understand the risks of short selling before taking the plunge. |
Brian Wesbury & Robert Stein, First Trust Advisors |
Russell Redenbaugh & James Juliano, Kairos Capital Management |
Cooper Howard & Collin Martin, CS There are multiple factors to consider, including your tax rate. |
Daniel Davies, Crooked Timber You wouldn't have thought that this was a difficult or controversial question. But actually it's both. |
Melissa Sotudeh, U.S. News The transition from earning and saving to living on a fixed income is a big change. In these uncharted waters, it's natural for retirees or pre-retirees to fear what a sudden market downturncan do to the nest egg they have spent decades building. |
Peter Coy, New York Times This week, the Federal Reserve may hint at an answer. |
Daniel Runde, Hill The "Doing Business" report is the most important contribution the World Bank has made to global development in the last 25 years. |
Dan Hannan, Washington Examiner What is the single dumbest government response to the coronavirus? There is, we can all agree, a crowded field competing for that distinction. But there is surely no policy so self-defeating, so needlessly harmful, so absurd in its own terms as the Biden administration's continuation of the travel… |
Madeline Marshall, Vox Making clean energy isn't enough. We also have to move it. |
Laura He, CNN Cheng Wei built a world-class ride-hailing app that not even Uber could keep up with in China. |
Nicole Gelinas, New York Post New Gov. Kathy Hochul encounters her first challenge as the MTA is set to introduce congestion pricing to Manhattan right as the Big Apple recovers from the pandemic, Nicole Gelinas writes. |
Roger Lowenstein, NYT The supposed link between buybacks and inequality is unproven. |
Anneken Tappe, CNN It's been a wobbly week on Wall Street and CNN Business' Fear and Greed Index is flashing "Fear." |
Steve Cuozzo, New York Post In the face of great hiring challenges, supply shortages and COVID-19 fears, our eateries stood up and brought their industry back. |
Rainer Zitelmann, Washington Examiner What do people in different countries think about the rich? An international survey set out to answer this very question. |
Fisher Investments Editorial Staff, Fisher Investments |
Fisher Investments Editorial Staff, Fisher Investments |
Fisher Investments Editorial Staff, Fisher Investments |
Fisher Investments Editorial Staff, Fisher Investments |
Bennett Tomlin, Bennett's Blog Understanding the role of wildcat banking in the United States is an important portal into the modern role of Tether in crypto. |
Ben Carlson, A Wealth Of Common Sense Corrections happen all the time. The reason is irrelevant. |
Joachim Klement, Klement on Investing CEOs aren't the kind of people that are commonly known for their humility. |
Charlie Bilello, Compound Advisors "Buy the dip." This has been the mantra for an entire generation of investors. Why? Because we are creatures of habit, and during the last 12 years the best habit you could possibly have had as an investor was to stop worrying and simply "buy the dip." |
Jamie Powell, FT There are a lot of differences between Lehman and Evergrande. |
Richard Murphy, Naked Capitalism Why rationing might be part of the future. |
Paul Romer, Paul Romer Suppose that a drug company is trying to get approval for a new pain medication that might have some serious negative side effects. How can the company keep regulators from finding any? Even if you have no training in statistics it is easy to understand that the sure-fire strategy is to focus attention on side effects that are rare. The smaller the number of events, the easier it is to dismiss the few that arise as chance outcomes. This same strategy for avoiding a discovery is being used now by people who want to keep us from finding that the protection from vaccines diminishes over time. | |
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