Friday, April 30, 2021

Forbes: Corporate Virtue Signaling Could Be Elevating Housing Costs

 By SIMON CONSTABLE

Virtual signaling by corporate executives may be causing the cost of housing to skyrocket. It is yet another example of the law of unintended consequences.

The case in point is the supersonic rally in the price of lumber over the last few months, which came despite the seemingly ample supply of trees. Read more here.

Photo by Gennifer Miller on Unsplash

Thursday, April 29, 2021

Forbes: ETF Investors Dump $17 Billion Of Gold, Most In 8 Years

By SIMON CONSTABLE

Wall Street seems to have gone cold on gold exchange-traded funds.

ETF investors investors dumped the most volume of gold since 2013 over the six months through March 31. It was no small quantity. The total sold amounted to a whopping 307.8 metric tons worth $17.5 billion at recent prices, according to a recent report from industry group World Gold Council. Read more here


Photo by Jingming Pan on Unsplash

Forbes: A Monster Corn Rally Likely This Summer

 By SIMON CONSTABLE

Better stock up on corn flakes while you can still afford them.

An exceptionally weak harvest in Brazil and a likely U.S. drought this year should propel corn prices even higher by the end of the year. Read more here.

Photo by Andre Ouellet on Unsplash

Forbes Japan: ビットコインはまだ「貨幣」から程遠い?

By SIMON CONSTABLE

Red more here.

Monday, April 26, 2021

Forbes: Two Nightmare Scenarios For Bitcoin

 By SIMON CONSTABLE

Cryptocurrencies could be damned if they do get government acceptance, and damned if they don’t. Read more here.


Thursday, April 22, 2021

Forbes: You’ll Never Guess Which State Has The Worst Small Cities For Starting A Business

 By SIMON CONSTABLE

Six of the ten worst towns or small cities to start a business are in the garden state, according to an April-dated report by financial website WalletHub, titled “2021’s Best and Worst Small Cities to Start a Business.” Read more here.

Wednesday, April 14, 2021

Briefings Magazine: Inflation That May Actually Inflate

By SIMON CONSTABLE

Inflation. It looms in the closet of many national economies, waiting to burst out like some dreaded ghost. It has brought even economies as great as the United States to their knees; back in 1971, President Richard Nixon was forced to freeze all salaries and prices because of it. Since then, it hasn’t said boo for decades, rising at only about 2 percent annually in the US since the 1980s. COVID only kept it away even more—crushing the rate to nearly zero. Read more here.