Inflation in Britain reached 10.1 percent in September, rising from 9.9 percent the month before, as food prices jumped 14.1 percent, their fastest spurt since 1982, and negated the impact of fuels’ falling costs, the Financial Times reported.
Category: 25 October 2022
WORLD RUNNING SHORT OF COPPER, TRADER SAYS
The global copper inventory has fallen to 4.9 days’ consumption and will end this year at only 2.7 days, Kostas Bintas, co-head of metals and minerals at Trafigura, a major commodities trading firm, told the Financial Times Mining Summit last week.
LOWER OIL PRICE OFFSET BY DOLLAR’S STRENGTH
Although Brent crude oil’s price has fallen about 25 percent from its high of $128 a barrel last March, oil importers are hard pressed to see much difference: the dollar has gained about 15 percent in value since then, forcing importers outside the U.S., including China, the European Union (EU), and India to still pay premium prices in their own currencies to settle their oil bills.
WHEN THE ECONOMY FALLS JOBS GO WITH IT
The world is headed into Dragflation: Declining economic growth and rising inflation.
FED OFFICIALS KEEP COZY RELATIONSHIPS WITH BANKS THEY REGULATE
The U.S. Federal Reserve is no stranger to allegations of ethical lapses, as we have reported in “Bankster Bandits Get Richer Playing the Inside Track” (14 Sep 2021) and “Fed’s Bankster Bandits Get Free Ride” (22 Sep 2022).
AIR TRAVEL REMAINS STRONG AS A “NEW NORMAL” EMERGES, CARRIERS SAY
After the traditional summer travel season ended, airline bookings remained strong, airlines reported. Instead of sales drying up between Labor Day and Thanksgiving, people kept flying in September, United Airlines said.
MORTGAGE APPLICATIONS, HOME SALES TANK AS MORTGAGE RATES EDGE UP
During the week ending 14 October, the number of applications for home mortgages fell 38 percent from the same week a year earlier to their lowest since 1997, the Mortgage Bankers Association said.
SPECIAL REPORT: GOVERNMENT OFFICIALS GET RICHER ON THE JOB WHILE ETHICS OFFICES SIT AND WATCH
Government officials working on measures to stem the COVID infestation made well-timed, highly profitable financial trades as markets fell as the COVID War began and again later as markets rallied, according to a Wall Street Journal investigation.
RETAIL INVESTORS HOLD CASH WHILE WAITING OUT MARKET CHAOS
After exiting equity markets during this year’s chaotic stock sell-off, individual investors transferred $155 billion into money market funds so far this year to take advantage of rising interest rates while stock markets settle down, the Financial Times reported.
FED OFFICIALS MULLING A SLOWER PACE OF RATE INCREASES
All indications are signaling that the U.S. Federal Reserve will add another three-quarters of a point to its key interest rate when its Open Market Committee meets next week.