11
Signs That The U.S. Economy Is Starting To Slow Down Dramatically
Michael
Snyder
14
November, 2018
The
pace at which things are changing is shocking the experts. Just
a few months ago, many of the experts were still talking about how
the U.S. economy was “booming”, but since then a major shift has
taken place. Most of the headlines have been about the
huge stock market declines that
we have been witnessing, but things have not been going well for the
real economy either. Home sales are way down, auto sales are
plummeting, the retail apocalypse is escalating, the middle class
continues to shrink and economic optimism is rapidly evaporating.
We haven’t seen anything like this since 2008, and many believe
that the economic downturn that is now upon us will ultimately be
even worse than what we experienced a decade ago. The following
are 11 signs that the U.S. economy is starting to slow down
dramatically…
#1 When
economic activity is rising, demand for oil increases, and oil prices
tend to go up. But when economic activity is slowing down,
demand for oil diminishes, and oil prices tend to go down. That
is why what is happening to the price of oil right now is
so alarming…
US oil prices plummeted 7% to a one-year low of $55.69 a barrel on Tuesday. It was crude’s worst day since September 2015.
The losses in the oil world have been staggering as worries deepen about excess supply. Crude is down 12 straight days, the longest losing streak since futures trading began in March 1983.
#2 One
new poll has found that only
13 percent of
Americans plan to buy a home in the next year. That number has
fallen for three quarters in a row, and it is now down by
almost half over
the last twelve months.
With that in mind, it comes as no surprise that inventory countywide soared 86% among single-family homes and 188% among condos in October compared to a year prior, according to newly published data by the Northwest Multiple Listing Service. It was the most massive year-over-year increase on record, dating back to the Dotcom bust, a rhythm that has some asking: Is the housing industry about to go bust?
#4 California
once had the hottest housing market in the entire nation, but now
home prices in the state are plummeting like
it is 2008 all over again.
#5 According
to the
latest Bank of America survey,
global fund managers are the most bearish that they have been since
the financial crisis of 2008…
According to the survey, 44% of the fund managers expect global growth to decelerate in the next year, the worst outlook since November 2008. What’s more, 54% are anticipating a slowdown in Chinese growth in the next year, the most bearish they’ve been in over 2 years.
#6 America’s
ongoing retail apocalypse just continues to accelerate.
According to a
recent Bloomberg article,
things are going so poorly for some mall operators that they “handing
over their keys to lenders even before leases end”…
Things are getting worse for malls across America. So much worse that their owners are walking away early from struggling properties, a trend that has mortgage bond investors bracing for losses.
Mall operators, eyeing defaults caused or made more likely by shuttered stores such as Sears Holdings Corp., are handing over their keys to lenders even before leases end. That’s forcing loan-servicing companies to either take a shot at running the properties or sell them cheap. And if they’re unable to salvage the debt payments, investors in commercial mortgage-backed securities will take a hit.
#7 Despite
the eruption of a major trade war, the U.S. trade deficit with the
rest of the world is on pace to set a
brand new all-time record in
2018.
#8 One
new study discovered that 62
percent of
all U.S. jobs do not currently pay enough to support a middle class
lifestyle.
#9 At
this point, most Americans barely have any financial cushion at all.
According to one recent survey, 58
percent of
all Americans have
less than $1,000 in savings.
#10 Right
now, more
than half of all U.S. children are
living in households that receive financial assistance from the
federal government.
#11 As
the economy slows down, an increasing number of Americans are being
forced into the streets. More
than half a million Americans are
currently homeless, and that number is growing with each passing day.
Meanwhile,
more troubling news continues to emerge from Wall Street on a daily
basis. One of the big stories this week has been the fact that
General Electric appears to be on the verge of “collapse”.
They have been completely locked out of the commercial paper market,
they are being completely overwhelmed by the giant mountain of debt
that they are carrying, and their formerly “investment grade”
bonds are now being traded like junk. The following comes
from Zero
Hedge…
Two weeks after we reported that GE had found itself locked out of the commercial paper market following downgrades that made it ineligible for most money market investors, the pain has continued, and yesterday General Electric lost just over $5bn in market capitalization. While far less than the $49bn wiped out from AAPL the same day, it was arguably the bigger headline grabber.
The shares slumped -6.88% after dropping as much as -10% at the lows after the company’s CEO, in an interview with CNBC yesterday, failed to reassure market fears about a weakening financial position. The CEO suggested that the company will now urgently sell assets to address leverage and its precarious liquidity situation whereby it will have to rely on revolvers – and the generosity of its banks – now that it is locked out of the commercial paper market.
GE
is not a financial company, but could this be a candidate to become
“the next Lehman Brothers”?
The
upward economic downturn of the last couple of years is totally gone,
and many believe that there will soon be a feverish race for the
exits on Wall Street. If you have not already positioned
yourself for the coming crisis, now
is the time to do so.
As we saw in 2008, markets tend to go down a whole lot faster than
they go up.
And
once things get really crazy on Wall Street, the real economy can
fall apart at a pace that is breathtaking. In 2008, millions of
people lost their jobs within a matter of months. This will
happen again, and there are an increasing number of signs that this
is going to happen much sooner than most people had anticipated.
When
ultra-conservative voices in New Zealand say this you know things are
much, much worse
Global
slowdown signs build
ofInterestNZ
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