Was curious to see the spread between the US National Debt and Real GDP. As we can see, the National Debt was sustainable prior to 2016 as productivity was greater, but this has since changed. How long can we continue this, especially with a looming recession aka reduced productivity in spite of continued deficit spending?
Just curious to see how the Real GDP chart stands against the National Debt chart. According to this, there is currently almost a 50% spread between productivity and fiscal spending. Is this sustainable?
Why is the S&P500 ready to go short again? This question can't be answer, I'm not a magician and no one will know what the market is going to do, but let's see what's giving me the hint of the short idea. Let's start from the Real GDP . We're going to consider the Real GDP which I'll be calling GDP during the post. After doing some research you can see how the...
Behind the scenes, the St Louis Fed is showing you a GANN 45-degree downtrend. Looks super bullish eh? Yeah, no it does not. ___________________________________________________________________________ Disaster ahead. PS. Eron lied his ass off in Q1 - that better be obvious by now.