Trickle down economy is working. Just sold a butt load of stock.................
last i checked there hasn't been any change... so this rise is just riding the wave of the last 8 years and speculation. Trickle down implies that the middle class will get more money... wages haven't kept up with growth/inflation over the course of the last 30 years... but um yeah my retirement account looks real good right now. Companies have a responsibility to shareholders first so they will increase dividends before wages that is where the trickle down goes.
I agree that the stocks are currently riding on speculation. The dividends before wages may be true in the short term, but I believe the play is to bring more manufacturing back from overseas and increase competitiveness for wages with the same labor pool. Our manufacturing jobs, which typically pay higher than these retail stores everywhere, have been slowly trickling out of the economy the last 30 years (partly due to regulations and tax advantages). Just my perspective..
The article is right that there are numerous factors to a growing manufacturing sector, but tax reform is another reason why. Just think about it. We are the largest economy on earth, which is driven 70% by consumer spending, but our corporate tax rate is noncompetitive. If you were a business owner, wouldn't you want to have direct exposure to the best consumer market this world has ever known? If the cost of doing business in that country is on par with other countries, wouldn't you want to move your business there?
Tax reform brings those barriers down, not to mention an expanding global economy.
So, to you're point, "manufacturing is not coming back to the US," is flat out wrong. I never said Trump was the reason. Maybe you thought that because I quoted the title of the article and it looked like I was making that claim. Trump does deserve some credit, however, as it is him who is pushing tax reform. Obama was focused on another agenda entirely.
Also, you should become familiar with the Conference Board for Leading Economic Indicators. It can be found here: https://www.conference-board.org/data/bciarchive.cfm?cid=1
Disclaimer: I didn't vote for DT and not endorsing him. I just look at the numbers and go by the actual date.
manufacturing jobs aren't coming back to america... labor is cheap in mexico logistics for delivering goods is no different than building them in mississippi. why is this so hard to understand. Shareholders always come first that doesn't change unless you get unions involved and we all know how that goes. there are also lots of things being automated where it took 10 humans to do a process now it takes 2 to operate the machine that doesn't get sick or show up late for work and pays for itself in 6 months.
I don't have a clue what will trigger it, all I know is that the last 3 January's have been tough on my portfolio and I swore after last year that I would be out by Jan.1 and watching. The first quarter of next year may be the best quarter in my lifetime but I will just have to get in late. I'm not going to lie, I'm scared of getting caught with my hand in the cookie jar.What do you think will trigger a correction?
last i checked there hasn't been any change... so this rise is just riding the wave of the last 8 years and speculation. Trickle down implies that the middle class will get more money... wages haven't kept up with growth/inflation over the course of the last 30 years... but um yeah my retirement account looks real good right now. Companies have a responsibility to shareholders first so they will increase dividends before wages that is where the trickle down goes.
In President Trump's first year in office, American factories are adding jobs at the fastest pace since 2014.
"United States has added 138,000 manufacturing jobs so far this year, far better than the 34,000 factory jobs lost over the same period last year."
Try to actually know what you're talking about next time.
And I hate quoting CNN: http://money.cnn.com/2017/12/04/news/economy/manufacturing-jobs-trump-2017/index.html
No body ever got rich saving money...unless you're a wealthy person making $300k/yr and you can save $100k a year. If you can do that, you will be rich one day saving money.
wages haven't kept up with growth/inflation over the course of the last 30 years....
Technically this may be true, but if you think 30 years ago middle class familes had more disposable can current middle class families, you don't remember 30 years ago well. Much more disposable income now, not even close, savings may be down and debt higher, but spending much higher now.
BTW, I just like busting balls when I hear people talk about the market in absolutes. Predictions are fine. I like those, I just like seeing rationale behind it.
"The market is going to correct because it's all driven on speculation." That's quite the statement there, but what's the logic and reasoning behind it?
The thing about the market is you have tons of folks on both sides (bulls and bears) that are extremely smart each predicting the total opposite of each other. I like hearing the rationale behind market calls.
If you save $10,000 cash a year, you will not be wealthy.
If you invest $10,000 a year, you will become wealthy.
Like I said, unless you're a wealthy person saving money, you will not ever become wealthy just saving money. One must INVEST money 90% of the time to become a wealthy individual.
I also said not using absolutes when talking about the market. I think using absolutes in math is okay though. Now, your definition of wealthy may be different than most, but saving $10,000 a year for 25 years would only yield you $250,000.