27 Huge Red Flags For The U.S. Economy

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  • ELVIS
    Banned
    • Dec 2003
    • 44120

    27 Huge Red Flags For The U.S. Economy

    Michael Snyder

    If you believe that the U.S. economy is heading in the right direction, you really need to read this article. As we look toward the second half of 2014, there are economic red flags all over the place. Industrial production is down. Home sales are way down. Retail stores are closing at the fastest pace since the collapse of Lehman Brothers. U.S. household debt is up substantially, and in 20 percent of all U.S. families everyone is unemployed.

    In so many ways, what we are witnessing right now is so similar to what we experienced during the build up to the last great financial crisis. We are making so many of the very same mistakes that we made the last time, and yet our “leaders” seem completely oblivious to what is happening. But the warning signs are very clear. All you have to do is open your eyes and look at them. The following are 27 huge red flags for the U.S. economy…

    #1 Despite endless assurances from the Obama administration that we are in an “economic recovery”, the number one concern for U.S. voters is “Unemployment/Jobs” according to a recent Gallup survey.

    #2 Historically, sales for construction equipment manufacturer Caterpillar have been a pretty good indicator of where the global economy is heading next. Unfortunately, sales were down 13 percent last month and have now experienced year over year declines for 17 months in a row.

    #3 During the first quarter of 2014, profits at office supply giant Staples fell by 43.5 percent.

    #4 Foot traffic at Wal-Mart stores fell by 1.4 percent during the first quarter of 2014. Analysts seem puzzled as to why Wal-Mart is “underperforming“. Perhaps it is because the U.S. middle class is being steadily destroyed and U.S. consumers are tapped out at this point.

    #5 It is being projected that Sears will soon close hundreds more stores and will eventually go out of business altogether…

    The company said this week that it may sell its 51% stake in Sears Canada, which operates nearly 20% of the company’s stores worldwide. It has quietly closed nearly 100 U.S. stores in the last year. Next week, it’s expected to announce dismal fiscal first quarter results and possibly yet more store closings.

    “They have too many stores and they’re losing a lot of money, burning cash,” said John Kernan, an analyst with Cowen.
    Kernan expects the company to close 500 of its 1,980 U.S. stores in a few years and, ultimately, to go out of business.

    “The lights are going off at Sears and Kmart,” he said. “There are tumbleweeds blowing through the parking lots at Kmart. They’re basically completely irrelevant.”

    The “retail apocalypse” just continues to roll on, but the mainstream media is treating this like it is not really a big deal.

    #6 The labor force participation rate for Americans from the age of 25 to the age of 29 has fallen to an all-time record low.

    #7 According to official government numbers, everyone is unemployed in 20 percent of all American families.

    #8 As families struggle to pay their bills, many of them are increasingly turning to debt in order to make ends meet. Earlier this month we learned that total U.S. household debt has increased for three quarters in a row. And as I noted in one recent article, total consumer credit in the United States has increased by 22 percent over the past three years, and 56 percent of all Americans have “subprime credit” at this point.

    #9 Interest rates on student loans are scheduled to increase substantially on July 1st…

    As of July 1, federal student loan rates will edge up. Rates overall will be up 0.8% compared to current rates.

    Federal Stafford Loans for undergraduate students will be 4.66% — up from 3.86%. Federal Stafford Loans for graduate students will be 6.21% — up from 5.41%.

    Federal Grad PLUS and Federal Parent PLUS Loans will be at 7.21% — up from 6.41%.

    This is going to put even more pressure on the growing student loan debt bubble.

    #10 U.S. industrial production fell by 0.6 percent in April. This should not be happening if the economy truly was “recovering”.

    #11 Manufacturing job openings in the United States have declined for four months in a row.

    #12 Existing home sales have fallen for seven of the last eight months and seem to be repeating a pattern that we witnessed back in 2007 prior to the last financial crash.

    #13 In the real estate bubble market of Phoenix, sales in April were down 12 percent year over year, and active inventory was up 49 percent year over year. In other words, there are tons of homes on the market, but sales are going down.

    #14 The homeownership rate in the United States has dropped to the lowest level in 19 years.

    #15 Trading revenue at big banks all over the western world is way down…

    Late Friday, it was JPMorgan who said trading revenues will be down 20 percent this quarter. Now Barclays says trading revenues in the first three months were down 41 percent. The company cited “challenging trading conditions resulting in subdued client activity.” Like JPMorgan, Barclays also warned they were seeing no improvement in trading in the second quarter.

    #16 Jan Loeys, JPMorgan’s head of global asset allocation, is warning that the Federal Reserve is creating a huge financial bubble which could “push us into a credit crisis“…

    Where do we go from here? To this analyst, still very subdued economic growth, both at the US and global level, implies continued easy monetary policy. The risk is that bond yields rise no faster than the forwards. Financial overheating (asset inflation) proceeds much faster than economic overheating (CPI inflation). Before CPI inflation has a chance to emerge, and before monetary policy is truly above neutral, a financial bubble will have popped up somewhere and will have corrected, pushing the economy down. That is what has happened in the past 25 years. The behavior of central banks gives us no confidence that this time will be different: Central banks talk about financial instability, but appear to define this mostly in term of bank leverage. Each successive boom and bust is always in another place. A bubble can emerge without leverage. It is not possible to project exactly where this boom and bust cycle will take place as knowing where it will be would induce evasive actions that should prevent it from occurring. One possible ending, among many, is that ultra-easy rates having induced credit markets to grow much faster than equity markets, combines with reduced market making by banks (many of whom have become like brokers) to create a liquidity crisis when the Fed starts the first set of rate hikes. This could then be bad enough to close primary markets, and thus push us into a credit crisis.

    #17 Peter Boockvar, the chief market analyst at the Lindsey Group, is warning that the U.S. stock market could experience a 20 percent decline once quantitative easing completely ends.

    #18 A lot of other big names are telling CNBC that they expect a significant stock market “correction” very soon as well…

    A bevy of high-profile names have warned lately that the market is on the doorstep of a major move lower. From long-term market bulls such as Piper Jaffray to short-term traders such as Dennis Gartman, expectations are high that the major averages are poised for a big dip, with calls varying from 10 percent or so all the way up to 25 percent.

    #19 The number of Americans enrolled in the Social Security disability program exceeds the entire population of the nation of Greece and has just hit another brand new record high.

    #20 Poverty continues to grow all over the country, and right now there are 49 million Americans that are dealing with food insecurity.

    #21 According to Pew Charitable Trusts, tax revenue in 26 U.S. states is still lower than it was back in 2008 even though tax rates have gone up in many areas since then.

    #22 Barack Obama is doing his best to keep his promise to destroy the U.S. coal industry…

    The EPA is about to impose a new regulation that will reduce carbon emissions from existing power plants starting June 2 and will become permanent in 2015. The new regulation, according to Politico, is the “most dramatic anti-pollution regulation in a generation.” Because the new regulation will further cripple the coal industry, as coal-burning plants will be severely affected, American power will become more dependent on natural gas, solar and wind.

    #23 Climatologists are now saying that the state of Texas is going through the worst period of drought that it has experienced in 500 years.

    #24 It is being reported that “dozens of Texas communities” are less than 90 days away from being completely out of water.

    #25 It is being projected that the drought in California will cost the agricultural industry 1.7 billion dollars and that approximately 14,500 agricultural workers will lose their jobs.

    #26 Due in part to the drought, the price of meat rose at the fastest pace in more than 10 years last month.

    #27 According to recent surveys, only about a quarter of all Americans believe that the country is heading in the right direction.


  • ELVIS
    Banned
    • Dec 2003
    • 44120

    #2
    #28 Roughly 90% of all Government Motors auto loans are sub prime...

    Comment

    • Nitro Express
      DIAMOND STATUS
      • Aug 2004
      • 32942

      #3
      The world has split along two systems. A debt based system the US and Europe are on. Then you have economies based on real tangible goods like Russia and China. Why did Russia and China cement a $400 billion energy deal? The Ukraine was the last straw. They are going to start selling their US bonds off and using their influence to kill the Federal Reserve Petroldollar.

      Anyone with a brain knows the US will never be free unless we get rid of the Federal Reserve Bank or nationalize it. Congress could have refused to renew the FED's charter but they renewed it. Congress isn't going to End the FED. Well maybe the Shanghai alliance and BRICS will. They have a real economy based on real goods. Ours is based on paper and market manipulation. Illusion if you will.

      I think we are seeing the begining of the end of fractional reserve banking. That's not a bad thing. The problem is we have no real leadership in the west right now and basically we could issue a US Treasury Note again. It wouldn't be worth as much as the Chinese RMB but we could be competitive in manufacturing again and make money off of being an exporter. The thing is, do the American people want to work? They have gotten too used to handouts created on illusion.

      The world is shifting to real goods because the fractional reserve system got too greedy and is choking. The wild card is how violent the population and government gets. They have armed the agencies to the teeth. I think it might boil down to the communities that can work together will get through it. The ones who are full of self-interest might get very violent. Lot's of variables.

      One thing for sure. The US will become more and more isolated on the world stage and until we clean the political situation up, I doubt the economy will improve. The main problem is corruption. The post 9/11 neocon geopolitical objectives have done a lot of damage and the Democrats failure to take us on another course has added to the problem. I don't know. I sometimes think Obama isn't even running the State Department. The situation has flown out of control.

      Everyone is just going to do what they want to do. Once you start to break too many laws, the laws just don't mean anything anymore. Once trust and contracts mean nothing, you are in the abyss. That's where we are headed. I don't see anyone turning the ship. The ship is sinking and everyone is arguing over who gets the deck chairs. Nobody has any answers. One thing is certain. We are headed into a whole new realm where the old power brokers will be replaced by new ones. The old system of hoarding wealth and waging war to hoard more wealth has failed. NATO went from a defensive posture to an offensive posture while the IMF and World Bank are all too happy to lap up the goods.

      All I know is the old guard is desperate to create any distraction to take the public's attention off their failures. Heck. Maybe the global warming hysteria is part of the distraction program. They laid off of it and now they are pushing that hard right after their attempt to get Putin to invade the Ukraine failed. The fuckers have been trying to start a war because what just happened with this new oil deal is their biggest fear. A unified China and Russia is a nightmare to the old oligarch class.

      I think we are going to see all sorts of crazy shit. It's simply a bunch of corporate gangsters trying to hang onto their empire. It's not even really countries anymore. It's corporations. Even our politicians and supreme court justices are admitting they serve corporations now.
      Last edited by Nitro Express; 05-22-2014, 02:43 AM.
      No! You can't have the keys to the wine cellar!

      Comment

      • ELVIS
        Banned
        • Dec 2003
        • 44120

        #4
        Obomba isn't running the State Department...

        I believe he can be pushed around as Cheney said recently...

        But these crooks and bankers and globalists aren't going down without a fight...

        I think they're gonna stage a major oil conflict and blame it on China and Russia...

        Comment

        • twonabomber
          formerly F A T
          ROTH ARMY WEBMASTER

          • Jan 2004
          • 11294

          #5
          #4 Foot traffic at Wal-Mart stores fell by 1.4 percent during the first quarter of 2014. Analysts seem puzzled as to why Wal-Mart is “underperforming“. Perhaps it is because the U.S. middle class is being steadily destroyed and U.S. consumers are tapped out at this point.
          Our division had a horrible first quarter. Leadership blames the rough winter, claiming consumers didn't go shopping and therefore not buying things that we are a part of. We shall see.


          #5 It is being projected that Sears will soon close hundreds more stores and will eventually go out of business altogether…

          The company said this week that it may sell its 51% stake in Sears Canada, which operates nearly 20% of the company’s stores worldwide. It has quietly closed nearly 100 U.S. stores in the last year. Next week, it’s expected to announce dismal fiscal first quarter results and possibly yet more store closings.

          “They have too many stores and they’re losing a lot of money, burning cash,” said John Kernan, an analyst with Cowen.
          Kernan expects the company to close 500 of its 1,980 U.S. stores in a few years and, ultimately, to go out of business.

          “The lights are going off at Sears and Kmart,” he said. “There are tumbleweeds blowing through the parking lots at Kmart. They’re basically completely irrelevant.”

          The “retail apocalypse” just continues to roll on, but the mainstream media is treating this like it is not really a big deal.
          Sears has been fucked for a long time. I'm not sure I see that as an indicator for anything else. People are finding other places to shop.
          Writing In All Proper Case Takes Extra Time, Is Confusing To Read, And Is Completely Pointless.

          Comment

          • Nitro Express
            DIAMOND STATUS
            • Aug 2004
            • 32942

            #6
            I think we have a well trained actor as president. I mean the guy grew up as Barry Soetoro. That is who he was in high school and before. Barrack Obama is a stage name. Whoever groomed this guy and created his public image wanted him to have worldwide appeal; especially, in Africa. I smell George Soros. I think our military and intelligence agencies have helped Soros steal oil resources in sub saharan Africa.

            The thing with Barrack Obama, he can shamelessly lie. He feels no guilt. Look at the situation with the VA hospitals. People died because of the corruption. A normal human being would show emotion. Jimmy Carter would. Ronald Reagan would. Obama can't. He's lived a life of lies and deception for so long that he has no idea what's real. I actually think he believes his own bullshit. He might be a psychopath. Even Bill Clinton could get emotional. Barrack Obama is like a machine. The guy is stone cold. I find that very disturbing because such a person can inflict a lot of pain, suffering, and destruction. I think Dick Cheney is another cold character as well. I mean I want my president to be a human being, not a fucked up machine.
            No! You can't have the keys to the wine cellar!

            Comment

            • Nitro Express
              DIAMOND STATUS
              • Aug 2004
              • 32942

              #7
              Originally posted by twonabomber
              Our division had a horrible first quarter. Leadership blames the rough winter, claiming consumers didn't go shopping and therefore not buying things that we are a part of. We shall see.




              Sears has been fucked for a long time. I'm not sure I see that as an indicator for anything else. People are finding other places to shop.
              I went into a Sears store to buy some tools. They were having a big close out clothing sale. I bought a bunch of workout clothes for a great price. I had no idea they sold that stuff. I mean they had better inventory than I had thought. I think Sears problem is marketing. You have to draw people in. When was the last time you ever saw a Sears ad?
              No! You can't have the keys to the wine cellar!

              Comment

              • twonabomber
                formerly F A T
                ROTH ARMY WEBMASTER

                • Jan 2004
                • 11294

                #8
                Commercials sometimes, but every Thursday there's a Sears ad in the paper and maybe a Sears Outlet ad too. Not sure what they run on Sunday.

                Sears is using iPads or some shit at the checkout, and no one seems to know how to use them. From what I've read on other forums waiting for the clerk to figure out the iPad is pissing people off and not making them want to go back to Sears.
                Writing In All Proper Case Takes Extra Time, Is Confusing To Read, And Is Completely Pointless.

                Comment

                • VAiN
                  Use my hand, I won't look
                  ROCKSTAR

                  • Nov 2006
                  • 5056

                  #9
                  Originally posted by Nitro Express
                  I think Sears problem is marketing. You have to draw people in.
                  Agreed.. they really need to do an overhaul and change/upgrade the brand. They have no juice what-so-ever. They're going to go the way of JC Penny..
                  Originally posted by wiseguy
                  That shit will welcome you in the morning and pour the milk in your count chocula for ya.

                  Comment

                  • Nitro Express
                    DIAMOND STATUS
                    • Aug 2004
                    • 32942

                    #10
                    Sears is an iconic brand. I had a friend who flipped houses and he was remodeling a Sears and Roebuck house in a historic neighborhood. It was in a railroad town and I guess in the day railroad workers could get a real good deal on freight. There were a lot of Sears and Roebuck homes because of that. Sears had an assortment of kit homes and you mail ordered the kit and the pieces would arrive. It was all top quality wood milled in big wood working shops. If the buyer built a good foundation and followed the instructions he had a nice home. Some of them are really neat houses.

                    I think Sears should position itself as an iconic brand that's been around and then tie that in with modern times. They need a top notch marketing plan which I don't see. They have a great history and they are letting their brand just die. It's all about branding. With that history you can be something else than just another big box store.

                    Last edited by Nitro Express; 05-23-2014, 12:01 AM.
                    No! You can't have the keys to the wine cellar!

                    Comment

                    • Zing!
                      Veteran
                      • Oct 2011
                      • 2363

                      #11
                      In the past 6 months here in MN, the cornerstone Sears in our mall went belly up (replaced by a Sheel's) and our Sears card was not renewed by them - their reason being we weren't using it enough!?! Talk about disenfranchising loyal customers. That iconic brand can tank for all I care.
                      My karma just ran over your dogma.

                      Comment

                      • twonabomber
                        formerly F A T
                        ROTH ARMY WEBMASTER

                        • Jan 2004
                        • 11294

                        #12
                        Maybe Citi has more to do with the credit card than Sears does. I had a decent limit and balance on mine, and paid it off...two months later they dropped my limit to $250. Haven't used it since.
                        Writing In All Proper Case Takes Extra Time, Is Confusing To Read, And Is Completely Pointless.

                        Comment

                        • ELVIS
                          Banned
                          • Dec 2003
                          • 44120

                          #13
                          Paying it off is a no no...

                          Comment

                          • Kristy
                            DIAMOND STATUS
                            • Aug 2004
                            • 16738

                            #14
                            Originally posted by Nitro Express
                            I had a friend who flipped houses and he was remodeling a Sears and Roebuck house in a historic neighborhood.
                            Was this before or after flying "choppers" with you in the C.I.A.?

                            You seem have a lot of "friends" everywhere in all lines of work.

                            Comment

                            • Kristy
                              DIAMOND STATUS
                              • Aug 2004
                              • 16738

                              #15
                              Originally posted by Smellvis

                              #4 Foot traffic at Wal-Mart stores fell by 1.4 percent during the first quarter of 2014. Analysts seem puzzled as to why Wal-Mart is “under performing“. Perhaps it is because the U.S. middle class is being steadily destroyed and U.S. consumers are tapped out at this point.

                              Wal-Snot has been steadily destroying the middle class by simply undermining and stripping away any other competition with "Roll back prices" that are no bargain whatsoever until they can monopolize the local businesses into bankruptcy leading them to eventually close. They pay shit wages, no health incentive for employees most of which are on food stamps to survive, and these cocksuckers are "puzzled."

                              How anyone can shop at one of these warehouse shitholes in good conscience is beyond me.

                              Comment

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