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Lying bidens America, Stocks Tank as Bond Yields Rise and Oil Hits 3-Year High, Natural Gas 7-Year High

doerunn

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Jul 13, 2001
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U.S. stocks fell Tuesday, as rising bond yields and energy prices weighed on the market.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average sank 650 points at the low of the day before recovering to a 569 point, or 1.6 percent, decline. The S&P 500 tumbled two percent. The Nasdaq Composite plunged 2.8 percent. The small-cap Russell 2000 index fell 2.2 percent.

Ten of the 11 sectors of the S&P 500 were off, with only the energy sector ending the day in positive territory. Information Technology was the worst-performing sector, down 2.6 percent. Communications Services fell 2.5 percent, dragged down by a 3.8 percent decline in interactive media and services, the category that includes Facebook and Alphabet.

The yield on 10-year Treasurys hit 1.54, the highest since June. Yields move in the opposite direction of bond prices, so a rising yield indicates a sell-off. Brent Crude briefly topped $80 a barrel, a three year high, and was at $78.52 at four p.m. in New York. Natural gas for October delivery traded at the costliest in seven years.

Bond yields have climbed after the Fed appeared to indicate it would begin to pull back its bond purchases later this week. The economic forecasts of individual members of the Federal Open Market Committee indicated that the median expectation for a rise in the Fed’s interest rate target had been pulled forward, expectations for 2021 growth have diminished, and inflation this year is expected to be stronger than anticipated.

Investors are also worried that sharply higher energy costs could weigh on profits and fuel inflationary pressures. Food prices are rising rapidly as well. Higher prices of food and energy can also eat into what consumers spend on other goods and services.

Consumer confidence slumped in September, the third straight monthly decline, the Conference Board said Tuesday. Home prices are up 19.7 percent compared with a year ago, according to the Case-Shiller National Home Price Index.
 
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U.S. stocks fell Tuesday, as rising bond yields and energy prices weighed on the market.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average sank 650 points at the low of the day before recovering to a 569 point, or 1.6 percent, decline. The S&P 500 tumbled two percent. The Nasdaq Composite plunged 2.8 percent. The small-cap Russell 2000 index fell 2.2 percent.

Ten of the 11 sectors of the S&P 500 were off, with only the energy sector ending the day in positive territory. Information Technology was the worst-performing sector, down 2.6 percent. Communications Services fell 2.5 percent, dragged down by a 3.8 percent decline in interactive media and services, the category that includes Facebook and Alphabet.

The yield on 10-year Treasurys hit 1.54, the highest since June. Yields move in the opposite direction of bond prices, so a rising yield indicates a sell-off. Brent Crude briefly topped $80 a barrel, a three year high, and was at $78.52 at four p.m. in New York. Natural gas for October delivery traded at the costliest in seven years.

Bond yields have climbed after the Fed appeared to indicate it would begin to pull back its bond purchases later this week. The economic forecasts of individual members of the Federal Open Market Committee indicated that the median expectation for a rise in the Fed’s interest rate target had been pulled forward, expectations for 2021 growth have diminished, and inflation this year is expected to be stronger than anticipated.

Investors are also worried that sharply higher energy costs could weigh on profits and fuel inflationary pressures. Food prices are rising rapidly as well. Higher prices of food and energy can also eat into what consumers spend on other goods and services.

Consumer confidence slumped in September, the third straight monthly decline, the Conference Board said Tuesday. Home prices are up 19.7 percent compared with a year ago, according to the Case-Shiller National Home Price Index.
Building Back Better!
 
U.S. stocks fell Tuesday, as rising bond yields and energy prices weighed on the market.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average sank 650 points at the low of the day before recovering to a 569 point, or 1.6 percent, decline. The S&P 500 tumbled two percent. The Nasdaq Composite plunged 2.8 percent. The small-cap Russell 2000 index fell 2.2 percent.

Ten of the 11 sectors of the S&P 500 were off, with only the energy sector ending the day in positive territory. Information Technology was the worst-performing sector, down 2.6 percent. Communications Services fell 2.5 percent, dragged down by a 3.8 percent decline in interactive media and services, the category that includes Facebook and Alphabet.

The yield on 10-year Treasurys hit 1.54, the highest since June. Yields move in the opposite direction of bond prices, so a rising yield indicates a sell-off. Brent Crude briefly topped $80 a barrel, a three year high, and was at $78.52 at four p.m. in New York. Natural gas for October delivery traded at the costliest in seven years.

Bond yields have climbed after the Fed appeared to indicate it would begin to pull back its bond purchases later this week. The economic forecasts of individual members of the Federal Open Market Committee indicated that the median expectation for a rise in the Fed’s interest rate target had been pulled forward, expectations for 2021 growth have diminished, and inflation this year is expected to be stronger than anticipated.

Investors are also worried that sharply higher energy costs could weigh on profits and fuel inflationary pressures. Food prices are rising rapidly as well. Higher prices of food and energy can also eat into what consumers spend on other goods and services.

Consumer confidence slumped in September, the third straight monthly decline, the Conference Board said Tuesday. Home prices are up 19.7 percent compared with a year ago, according to the Case-Shiller National Home Price Index.
The rest of the story. The pandemic has disrupted lives across all countries and negatively affected global economic growth in 2020 beyond anything experienced in nearly a century. New variants of the Covid-19 virus and a surge in diagnosed cases in large developing economies and resistance to vaccinations among some populations in developed economies raise questions about the speed and strength of an economic recovery in the near term!
 
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U.S. stocks fell Tuesday, as rising bond yields and energy prices weighed on the market.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average sank 650 points at the low of the day before recovering to a 569 point, or 1.6 percent, decline. The S&P 500 tumbled two percent. The Nasdaq Composite plunged 2.8 percent. The small-cap Russell 2000 index fell 2.2 percent.

Ten of the 11 sectors of the S&P 500 were off, with only the energy sector ending the day in positive territory. Information Technology was the worst-performing sector, down 2.6 percent. Communications Services fell 2.5 percent, dragged down by a 3.8 percent decline in interactive media and services, the category that includes Facebook and Alphabet.

The yield on 10-year Treasurys hit 1.54, the highest since June. Yields move in the opposite direction of bond prices, so a rising yield indicates a sell-off. Brent Crude briefly topped $80 a barrel, a three year high, and was at $78.52 at four p.m. in New York. Natural gas for October delivery traded at the costliest in seven years.

Bond yields have climbed after the Fed appeared to indicate it would begin to pull back its bond purchases later this week. The economic forecasts of individual members of the Federal Open Market Committee indicated that the median expectation for a rise in the Fed’s interest rate target had been pulled forward, expectations for 2021 growth have diminished, and inflation this year is expected to be stronger than anticipated.

Investors are also worried that sharply higher energy costs could weigh on profits and fuel inflationary pressures. Food prices are rising rapidly as well. Higher prices of food and energy can also eat into what consumers spend on other goods and services.

Consumer confidence slumped in September, the third straight monthly decline, the Conference Board said Tuesday. Home prices are up 19.7 percent compared with a year ago, according to the Case-Shiller National Home Price Index.
Typical that you blame Biden but omit the actual cause of everything you listed!
 
U.S. stocks fell Tuesday, as rising bond yields and energy prices weighed on the market.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average sank 650 points at the low of the day before recovering to a 569 point, or 1.6 percent, decline. The S&P ²500 tumbled two percent. The Nasdaq Composite plunged 2.8 percent. The small-cap Russell 2000 index fell 2.2 percent.

Ten of the 11 sectors of the S&P 500 were off, with only the energy sector ending the day in positive territory. Information Technology was the worst-performing sector, down 2.6 percent. Communications Services fell 2.5 percent, dragged down by a 3.8 percent decline in interactive media and services, the category that includes Facebook and Alphabet.

The yield on 10-year Treasurys hit 1.54, the highest since June. Yields move in the opposite direction of bond prices, so a rising yield indicates a sell-off. Brent Crude briefly topped $80 a barrel, a three year high, and was at $78.52 at four p.m. in New York. Natural gas for October delivery traded at the costliest in seven years.

Bond yields have climbed after the Fed appeared to indicate it would begin to pull back its bond purchases later this week. The economic forecasts of individual members of the Federal Open Market Committee indicated that the median expectation for a rise in the Fed’s interest rate target had been pulled forward, expectations for 2021 growth have diminished, and inflation this year is expected to be stronger than anticipated.

Investors are also worried that sharply higher energy costs could weigh on profits and fuel inflationary pressures. Food prices are rising rapidly as well. Higher prices of food and energy can also eat into what consumers spend on other goods and services.

Consumer confidence slumped in September, the third straight monthly decline, the Conference Board said Tuesday. Home prices are up 19.7 percent compared with a year ago, according to the Case-Shiller National Home Price Index.
I think the most annoying issue being pushed by the Biden administration is emboldening the IRS. Banks are going to be required to report any deposit over $600 to the IRS. The Democrats are looking to monitor and harass hard working Americans through Gestapo tactics. This is very dangerous. With this going to happen along with the proposed tax increases and all the issues you list, especially the inflation factor, it will be difficult in the future to not just save your money but not to have IRS looking over your shoulder to steal what you save. This Democratic administration is the worst in US history.
 
I think the most annoying issue being pushed by the Biden administration is emboldening the IRS. Banks are going to be required to report any deposit over $600 to the IRS. The Democrats are looking to monitor and harass hard working Americans through Gestapo tactics. This is very dangerous. With this going to happen along with the proposed tax increases and all the issues you list, especially the inflation factor, it will be difficult in the future to not just save your money but not to have IRS looking over your shoulder to steal what you save. This Democratic administration is the worst in US history.

With inflation on currrent course $600 might not cover dinner for 4 at Applebees?
 
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You blamed Trump for Covid- short memory.
Wrong! I never blamed Trump for the actual virus, I blamed him for downplaying the dangers. He told journalist Bob Woodward, in taped interviews for a book, that the coronavirus was more deadly than the Flu and could be transmitted in the air-- but communicated none of that to the American people. As part of the White House's effort at damage control, Trump told reporters that his recorded remarks to Woodward were vastly different from what he was telling the public because he was worried about frightening people. Everyone knows the virus originated in China. The only disagreements were over whether it'd spread was due to a lab leak or natural occurrence.
 
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hey mikey $5 bucks to you if you scream fire in a theater 🤣 😂 🤪 . I'm shocked with your intellect (notice the dripping sarcasm) you couldn't or better said failed to consider influencing mass hysteria
Wrong! I never blamed Trump for the actual virus, I blamed him for downplaying the dangers.
-Didn't he lock down all travel and boarders to prevent the virus from coming in ( I wish we had sum of that right now) ?

-Didn't he promote therapeutic alternatives to help manage the virus ?

-Didn't he give the American population monetary relief(s) to help American families, because of their sacrifices ?

-Didn't he make operation Warp Speed , that not just produced the 1st vaccines to combat Covid in the world, but did it in record time and developed ground shattering Virus/ Vaccine technology in the process ?

-Didn't he enact WorldWar era legislation that allowed the American Industrial complex to revert and retro fit , so they can build Respirators ( that never should of been deficient, if the last administration would of done their job by refilling the stock piles they DRAINED ) .

Excuse me, but doth protest toooooo much Karen er I mean mikey. Maybe change the lenses on you bifocals cuz all your seeing is 💩
 
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hey mikey $5 bucks to you if you scream fire in a theater 🤣 😂 🤪 . I'm shocked with your intellect (notice the dripping sarcasm) you couldn't or better said failed to consider influencing mass hysteria

-Didn't he lock down all travel and boarders to prevent the virus from coming in ( I wish we had sum of that right now) ?

-Didn't he promote therapeutic alternatives to help manage the virus ?

-Didn't he give the American population monetary relief(s) to help American families, because of their sacrifices ?

-Didn't he make operation Warp Speed , that not just produced the 1st vaccines to combat Covid in the world, but did it in record time and developed ground shattering Virus/ Vaccine technology in the process ?

-Didn't he enact WorldWar era legislation that allowed the American Industrial complex to revert and retro fit , so they can build Respirators ( that never should of been deficient, if the last administration would of done their job by refilling the stock piles they DRAINED ) .

Excuse me, but doth protest toooooo much Karen er I mean mikey. Maybe change the lenses on you bifocals cuz all your seeing is 💩
"To be honest with you, I wanted to always play it down. I still like playing it down, because I don't want to create a panic". Trump continually minimized the threat posed by the virus. He would talk a bout a handful of cases in the country and compare them with the more than 25,ooo deaths caused by seasonal Flu. On Jan. 24, trump tweeted his thanks to China for working to contain the virus. "It will work out well", he wrote. On Feb. 14, in a meeting with members of the Border Patrol Council he said,"we have a very small number of people in the country right now, with it. Many are getting better. Some fully recovered already. So we're in good shape". On Feb 24, Trump asked Congress for $1.25 billion in emergency aid. That same day he tweeted that the virus "is very much under control" and the stock market was starting to look very good to me". During the early months of the virus outbreak, Trump said the country was in very good shape and blamed Democrats and the media for trying to inflame the situation beyond what the facts were warrant.
 
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