SebastianBlue
President, International Julian Alvarez Fan Club
- Joined
- 25 Jul 2009
- Messages
- 57,736
Great post, mate — very helpful to get an insight in to the current state of Australia specifically, as I don’t not normally analyse economic data from your region.All valid points albeit some different variables at play between the major economies.
Serious problem hear in Australia is the inability for households to drive down debt per equity despite 20 years of moderate growth but in reality many recessions per capita and few government surpluses in that time.
Low productivity growth per capita and well below required retirement savings per capita given the living age increase in the last 40 years means heaps of stress to come on the public purse.
You can envisage negative cash rates without the market propping Seb Blue in a number of countries and as you say artificial propping by reserve banks can only go so far before unemployment sky rockets.
Our declared rate in Australia has been between 5.7 per cent and 5 per cent for some 13 years now but again per capita and given the decrease in the participation rate and reduced hours for the massive increase in casual labour as work forces across the major economies become less unionised overall spells some troubled financial times which as you said no doubt were spelling downturn so in some sense the acceleration of this is in sinister way I suppose a small positive for the medium outlook.
We a small economy on a world scale of course but impacted significantly by Chinese demands for our minerals especially coal and iron ore.
Despite most households living on the weekly wage to meet outgoings with only super for employees being saved at around 10 per cent of the wage many will be doing it tough in the years to come.
I’ve written elsewhere on here regarding the main drivers toward the next global economic collapse, so I won’t regurgitate here, but we have been on the road to it since well before 2008, although the response (and subsequent fiscal madness of the last decade) have not helped matters at all.
I have done my best to position my family to survive what is coming as well as we can.
I am a data scientist primarily working in economic forecasting, and the sort of volatility we have been seeing for the past four years, now magnified with further market uncertainty from this outbreak, makes my job that much more difficult.Are you traders or work in the city? I was going to suggest put options on the ftse 100 a week ago but felt it was crass to give advice on profiteering on others misfortunes - should of taken my own advice and I could have stopped work for a while
I have been able to leverage a few positions in the last month or so to hopefully help cover some of the incoming losses that I (we) will not be able to avoid, but my ethical stance won’t let me profit off this “correction” as much as others.
