comparemela.com

Latest Breaking News On - Topdown charts - Page 6 : comparemela.com

The perfect storm making everything you need more expensive… – Investment Watch

Steel, lumber, plastic and fuel. Corn, soybeans, sugar and sunflower oil. Houses, cars, diapers and toilet paper. Prices are rising almost everywhere you look. The post-pandemic recovery is in full swing and the global economy is struggling to keep up. Following a collapse at the start of the pandemic as businesses closed and millions of workers lost jobs, demand has rebounded with a vengeance, spurred by government stimulus and consumers flush with savings. But companies that idled factories or put workers on furlough during lockdowns are now unable to secure enough raw materials to build the houses, make the cars or assemble the appliances that are suddenly in high demand.

Ten Charts To Watch In 2021 - Q1 Update

Welcome to Q2! Things have moved fast since my original post (both in terms of market movements and the general consensus/sentiment). So I thought it would be helpful to take a quick progress check on the 10 Charts to Watch in 2021 . Please share this article - Go to very top of page, right hand side, for social media buttons. In the original article I shared what I thought would be the 10 most important charts to watch for multi-asset investors in the year ahead (and beyond). In this article I have updated those 10 charts, and provided some updated comments. [ Note: I have included the original comments from back at the start of the year, so you can quickly compare what I m thinking now vs what I said back then]

Weekly ChartStorm - 11 April 2021

Source: 4. Cash Allocations Back to the Bottom of the Range: Thanks mostly to market movements, surveyed cash allocations have dropped - this means at the margin there is incrementally less cash in proportion to equities (less buying power), and also tells us investors are implicitly comfortable running lower allocations. Source: 5. TD Ameritrade Investor Movement Index: This interesting sentiment indicator (based on trading account activity) has surged to the 3rd highest level since they began compiling the indicator (in 2010). Should be no surprise; especially in the context of the last two charts - sentiment is little short of euphoric. Source: 6. Sell Side Sell Indicator: basically this one is tracking sentiment of the sell side (analysts/strategists at investment banks). It’s a bit of a peculiar indicator, but could be worth noting as/when it hits the “sell signal“ level (which could well be soon).

© 2024 Vimarsana

vimarsana © 2020. All Rights Reserved.