Thursday, December 10, 2020
"Market Fantasy Updates AM 12/10/20"
Wednesday, December 9, 2020
“Economic Free-fall; Las Vegas Shuttering; Starbucks Zombies; Million Dollar Home Sales”
"Bracing For A Very Painful Year: 38% Of Americans Say That They Will Spend 2021 In 'Survival Mode'”
In face of the enormous financial pain mass unemployment has brought, in addition to the growing food and housing insecurity, many have engaged in disruptive behaviors that can be seen in the spike of social agitation in the cities and increased levels of addiction and substance abuse. In this video, we are going to analyze why the future remains bleak in the eyes of millions of our citizens and discuss the rising economic devastation employers and employees have been going through during the last chapters of 2020.
Over two-thirds of Americans have experienced acute financial difficulties throughout this year due to job loss, the reduction or the removal of their household incomes, or the decline of their emergency savings, according to a new Fidelity study. For that reason, a large share of the country is anticipating that many more setbacks are likely to come over the next few months. Of the 3,011 surveyed adults, more than 38% stated they will spend next year in “survival mode,” which means they will try to only focus on the day-to-day activities instead of establishing long-term goals in order to get themselves and their families through 2021.
The main reason why so many can anticipate being in “survival mode” next year is because the financial problems they had to deal with this year are probably going to extend until 2021 as well. According to the same survey, a staggering 68 percent of Americans say to have experienced a substantial financial setback. The study informed that of those, "23% lost a job or household income; 20% had an unexpected non-health emergency; 18% had to provide unexpected financial aid to family or friends; and 16% had a health emergency in their family."
Several households disclosed to still be concerned that financial stresses may worsen next year. Forty-six percent are worried about the sanitary outbreak's impact on the economy, while 35% are fearing for unexpected expenses, and 34% are anxious about the rising cost of food and other day-to-day essentials. Even those who remained employed throughout the recession have been coping with financial problems. A new research by MagnifyMoney found that roughly 1 in 3 full-time workers have experienced a pay cut due to the economic fallout of the health crisis.
Needless to say that all of these financial hardships are having a dramatic impact on holiday spending. After seeing their comfortable lifestyles removed from their reach, the "new normal" is leading millions of Americans to forgo holiday gifts this year. According to a WalletHub study, 1 in 3 Americans can't afford to offer gifts to their loved ones this Christmas.
The past 12 months have been exceedingly painful for most Americans, and the prospect of more turbulence over the next 12 months is leading many to engage in damaging behavior patterns. The strains of living in social isolation can have a destructive effect on millions of lives. A recent study of approximately 2,000 American adults is the first to outline the connection between alcohol use and stress triggered by health-crisis-related shutdowns.
The study uncovered that overall, one in three Americans have reported binge drinking during the current crisis. But with all things considered, it's understandable why Americans have been so overwhelmed, and trying to find an escape since everything continues to collapse around them. And on top of all of the tragic events witnessed so far, the day after Christmas, the extended unemployment benefits that have helped 12 million people and their families to stay afloat are going to expire.
"The 'Great Reset'"; "America, 2027"
"What Happens When the Suspension on Evictions Ends?"
Gregory Mannarino, PM 12/9/20: "Congress Awaits The GO ORDER From The Fed On Stimulus"
"A Look to the Heavens"
Chet Raymo, “On Being Good”
The Poet: David Whyte, "The Winter of Listening"
"The Level Of Intelligence..."
"The Pretender’s Dilemma"
"How and When the SCOTUS Will Overturn the Election"
The Constitution of the United States is explicit that only state legislators NOT state governors, attorney generals, or secretary of states can change how elections are processed. The media is keeping pretty quiet about this, or attempting to frame it as nothing, but it is a HUGE deal. The Supreme Court has already docketed the case meaning that the SCOTUS will hear it.
If the SCOTUS rules that Georgia, Michigan, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin did in fact violate the constitution (they did), then either:
1) Those votes that were allowed under the new laws are thrown out.Or…
2) The elections in those states become null and void.
If the outcome is #1, then President Trump wins all four states in a landslide. Remember, the mail-in ballots were pro-Biden by a massive margin (90%+). If those votes no longer count, Biden loses tens of thousands of votes in all four key states (his margin of victory is only 1% or lower in all four of them).
If the outcome is #2, then 62 electoral college votes vanish from the vote count. This means NO ONE hits the required 270 electoral college votes to win the election outright and the election moves into Congress as per the 12th Amendment. There, the House of Representatives votes for the President on a one vote per state basis. The GOP has 26 states, the Democrats have 24 states. This again, means Trump wins the election.
You can be furious at this all you want, but it’s the law. The fact the media doesn’t bother explaining this only reveals that they’re ignorant of how elections work in the U.S. or are so biased they can’t be bothered to consider an outcome in which Biden doesn’t win.
So, like I said… get ready for some fireworks. The odds of President Trump actually winning the election are the highest they’ve been since the election itself.""Bracing For A Very Painful Year: 38% Of Americans Say That They Will Spend 2021 In 'Survival Mode'”
"The Limits of Our Freedom"
"Watchdog Report: Fed’s Billions in Emergency Repo Loans to Wall Street Didn’t Go Away in June; They Just Went Dark"
"How It Really Might Be"
Gregory Mannarino, AM 12/9/20: “By Design, A Monster Financial Crisis Is Coming - Be Ready For It”
"Tenants, Landlords Face Imminent Crisis As Pandemic Lifelines Expire"
"January is going to be a mess. America's small-time landlords, along with their tenants, are in trouble as safety nets are set to expire. Tenants haven't paid rent in months, with a looming eviction moratorium expiring at the end of December. According to Reuters, the lack of rental income for landlords has also been troublesome, with many skipping mortgage payments, potentially resulting in a firesale of properties in the year ahead.
For 12 million Americans and their families - this Christmas will be their worst - as the extended unemployment benefits that have kept many of them afloat are set to expire later this month. Then on New Year's Day, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's eviction moratorium expires, which could result in a massive wave of evictions in the first half of 2021.
At the moment, $70 billion in unpaid back rent and utilities are set to come due, according to a new report via Moody's Analytics Chief Economist Mark Zandi.
Last month, Maryland utility companies began to terminate customers with overdue bills, many of which were unable to pay because of job loss due to the coronavirus downturn.
New research from the Aspen Institute warns 40 million people could be threatened with eviction over the coming months as the real economic crisis is only beginning.
According to Stacey Johnson-Cosby, president of the Kansas City Regional Housing Alliance, landlords are also in deep turmoil. She said more than 40% of the landlords surveyed in her coalition said they will have to sell their units because of the lack of rental income.
"They are sheltering our citizens free of charge, and there's nothing we can do about it," said Johnson-Cosby. "This is their retirement income." She said small landlords are frightened to speak out about non-paying tenants because social justice warriors and their "Cancel Rent" groups have attacked landlords. "What they don't realize is that if they run us out and we fail, it will be private equity and Wall Street firms that buy up all our properties, just like they did with houses after the last foreclosure crash."
Reuters interviewed Clarence Hamer, who may have to sell his house in the coming months because his "downstairs tenant owes him nearly $50,000." He owns a duplex in Brownsville, Brooklyn - and without those rental payments, Hamer has been unable to pay his mortgage. "I don't have any corporate backing or any other type of insurance," said Hamer, a 46-year-old landlord who works for the city of New York. "All I have is my home, and it seems apparent that I'm going to lose it." Hamer is not alone - millions of Americans are headed for a "dark winter" as they could be evicted or lose their homes in the coming months as government safety nets are set to expire.
Meanwhile, on Tuesday, stimulus talks quickly faded after it was reported that Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell touted his own plan rather than a bipartisan compromise for a deal.John Pollock, a Public Justice Center attorney and coordinator of the National Coalition for a Civil Right to Counsel, recently said January could bring a surge of eviction and homelessness," unlike anything we have ever seen" before."