Each week, we report instances where the money junky hedge funds, private equity groups and the already big companies swallow another piece of the global economy. Here are some more of what the BIGS have been gobbling up and how the Bigs keep getting bigger and the rich keep getting richer. It should be noted...
Tag: aug 16 2022
CHINA’S JULY ECONOMIC PERFORMANCE FAILS TO MEET PREDICTIONS
China’s retail sales and industrial production grew in July, year on year, but missed analysts’ predictions by significant amounts, showing the impact of the nation’s real estate crisis and massive zero-COVID policy lockdowns. These trends were forecast in previous Trends Journals and again reported in this issue. Retail sales expanded 2.7 percent in the month,...
VENTURE CAPITAL FIRMS HAVE RECORD AMOUNTS OF CASH ON HAND
On 1 August, the world’s venture capital firms were sitting on a record $539 billion in cash waiting to be deployed. The amount has grown by $100 billion this year alone, data service Preqin reported. Funds that focus on cryptocurrencies and blockchain businesses have done especially well, drawing in $21 billion so far this year,...
MEXICO’S CENTRAL BANK SETS RECORD-HIGH INTEREST RATE
Banxico, Mexico’s central bank, added three-quarters of a point to its base interest rate last week, lofting it to a record 8.5 percent after annual inflation sped up to 8.15 percent in July, its fastest clip since 2001. Wages rose an average of 9.5 percent at the same time, putting more upward pressure on prices....
ARGENTINA’S INTEREST RATE IS NOW 69.5 PERCENT
On 11 August, Argentina’s central bank added 9.5 percentage points to its key Leliq interest rate, moving it up to 69.5 percent in the largest single rate hike in almost three years. The bank had raised the rate by eight percentage points just two weeks earlier. The bank has jacked up the Leliq eight times...
RUSSIA’S ECONOMY CONTRACTS LESS THAN EXPECTED
Russia’s GDP shrank by 4 percent in this year’s second quarter, Rosstat, the country’s statistics agency, reported on 12 August. Russia’s economic productivity contracted much less than predicted during the first full quarter after it invaded Ukraine and after an array of Western sanctions had been laid against it. Economists had predicted a median 7-percent...
U.K. ECONOMY CONTRACTS IN SECOND QUARTER
Britain’s economy shrank by 0.1 percent in this year’s second quarter, the national statistics agency reported, after growing 0.8 in the first quarter. Analysts had foreseen a 0.2-percent reduction. Spending on services puckered by 0.4 percent as COVID-related testing and vaccinations wound down, cutting back health care expenditures. Overall, consumers spent 0.2 percent less during...
WHEN THE ECONOMY FALLS JOBS GO WITH IT
Inflation and interest rate hikes are causing companies in many sectors to lay off employees. To illustrate the employment trends and the socioeconomic implications, each week we will list important job losses from various sectors. Warby Parker cut 63 corporate staff members Peloton cut 800 staff, hiked prices and shut down stores Best Buy is...
WARREN REBUKES FED CHAIR POWELL
Saying a report by the U.S. Federal Reserve’s inspector general (IG) was “troubling,” Senator Elizabeth Warren (D-MA) castigated Fed chair Jerome Powell in a letter for withholding information about trades by Fed officials. The IG’s investigation was sparked by revelations that Robert Kaplan, president of the Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas, and Eric Rosengren, president...
REAL ESTATE CLOSINGS GO VIRTUAL
As of 9 August, 43 states have passed laws allowing real estate closings to take place online and the remaining seven states are facing growing pressure to make the shift unanimous. The new laws permit online notarization of documents, a key step in closings. Before the COVID virus arrived, only 22 states allowed virtual notarization,...