CloverKnollFarms
Super Member
CNH is making cuts now due to lack of demand.
They aren't buying tractors.
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401(k) hardship withdrawals are surging as high inflation squeezes Americans
More Americans are making hardship withdrawals from their 401(k) retirement plans to cover emergency expenses as they struggle with chronic inflation.www.foxbusiness.com
180 million is pretty small compared to the market as a whole. I do see it as a sign that the economy is on the verge of a real dump.
Student loan repayments are now supposed to resume, and I understand that the mortgage forbearance program is now ended. My assumption has been that once the residential real estate market finally tanks, the rest will tank.
The potential danger in that for all of us is whether Powell will jump back into trying to "rescue" the economy and do even more damage or whether he has to toe the line to hold down inflation whether he likes it or not.There has been so much talk of gloom and doom over the last several years that many of us are keeping our powder dry waiting for another 2009 buying chance.
All the tote the note dealers I know get their money out of the car in the first transaction. Everything else, if any, is just extra profit.I suppose for people who overpaid for cars the past couple of years.
There has been so much talk of gloom and doom over the last several years that many of us are keeping our powder dry waiting for another 2009 buying chance.
Official Inflation number for 2022 was 8%, Probably higher but they don't want to tell. 5% On a CD you are still losing moneyYes. I just put a year’s salary into a 14 month CD earning 5%. Kinda like back in the 1980s when it was actually worthwhile to buy a CD.
I funded my CD in 2023, when inflation is significantly lower than 2022.Official Inflation number for 2022 was 8%, Probably higher but they don't want to tell. 5% On a CD you are still losing money
you can get 5% for 6 months, get another for 6 months and you are making money. doing nothing. Inflation in 2023 is not 8% so you will make more.Official Inflation number for 2022 was 8%, Probably higher but they don't want to tell. 5% On a CD you are still losing money
wages are up but real wages are down. Basically raises are not keeping up with inflation. That is why so many people disapprove of the current economy. Inflation has compounded. Its gone up every year and never gone down. So over the last 2 years prices have had about an average of 20% increase. Your raises that you speak of have not been that much.Looks to me like the economy is better than it has been in years. Around here, nobody fixes up their old cars, appliances, or clothing, they just buy new ones.
I'm as bad as anyone - probably worse, since I just bought new lumber to build a shed for an old tractor that can't possibly be worth as much as what it cost me to keep it out of the weather.
Not only did I pay more to build the shed than that old tractor is worth, I drove right past the used lumber yard to get to Home Depot to buy new lumber. If that doesn't prove a point then I don't know what will.
That got me to thinking about the one real economic indicator never mentioned by economists - that we will know for sure a downturn has arrived when people start fixing old things instead of buyng new ones.
So far, local businesses still have "help wanted" signs out. "Will train; no experience necessary". Wages are high and trending up, not down. BTW, that's another way we will recognize a downturn if and when it happens. Jobs will be harder to find, not easier. Benefits will be less, and wages will go down, not up.
It's all happened before. Maybe a downturn will happen someday. But that someday isn't here yet.
And while we wait, there are some good tractors out there looking for a home.... or just a shed.
rScotty
My point is the same as ever - It's a big country, big enough that things in one place really are different from another.Glad things are going great where you're at, Maine is a ****show