Ziggurat
Penultimate Amazing
- Joined
- Jun 19, 2003
- Messages
- 61,871
If you are going to talk about the market, us a more rational index such as the S&P 500.
Or better yet, the Wilshire 5000.
If you are going to talk about the market, us a more rational index such as the S&P 500.
Time for a reality check. The DJIA is not an accurate measure of the US equities market due to the way the stocks are chosen and the index is calculated.
If you are going to talk about the market, us a more rational index such as the S&P 500.
Sure. Untill you install the psychohistory app.Personally I prefer the Trantor 873,000,000,000.
Sure, some say that it privileges Core stocks over Spiral stocks in weighting the planetary averages, but it's the only way to be truly comprehensive as to the full Empire economy.
Which is doing just fine, no matter what Raven Seldon says.
Sure. Untill you install the psychohistory app.
I spoke especially good English for over fifty years before I figured out how to write acceptable poetry. The former has to precede the latter.When I got out of trade school, I thought I knew it all. A week working in an actual production shop showed me I'd barely scratched the surface. After a month I knew more than all the years of school had taught me.
It won't make-or-break it, but gas prices, because they affect delivery prices of... everything, tend to inflate prices. But the biggest problem for politicians is that gas prices, for the reason above, but also because of their visibility, enrage the public like no other commodity. An increase in the price of a basic foodstuff, like flour or sugar, will also migrate to lots of other products, but it is not as if every supermarket has the price of flour posted on its marquee. So for incumbent politicians, high gas prices are extremely bad news, even though politics have very little to do with them, and whether the economy as a whole gets better or worse, you cannot change the public's perception.So this spike in gasoline prices could derail the fragile recovery.
So for incumbent politicians, high gas prices are extremely bad news, even though politics have very little to do with them, and whether the economy as a whole gets better or worse, you cannot change the public's perception.
ETA: It's also started back in the right direction as the unemployment rate in Illinois fell by 0.2% last month. The new state numbers won't come out till later in the month, but I'll bet they show that the recovery is continuing.
What I find odd about this spike is that the news and speculation of it seems to have happened before the actual price spike. I've read several articles speculating that we may have $5/gallon gas soon (and Ron Paul's flat out lie in the debate that gas was already at $6/gallon in Florida), but so far, the price here only went up to about $3.60-ish.
Even at $6 per gallon, it would still be cheaper than many Americans happily pay for bottled water.
That's a false comparison. If I had to drink 24 bottles of water every morning to get to and from work, I would probably be a little more sensitive about the price.
You must live very far away from your work and get terrible gas mileage if you use that much gas every day.
Plus, you can buy a gallon of distilled or spring water for under a dollar. When you buy the small bottles you're paying for the bottle and a really big "convenience" mark-up.That's a false comparison. If I had to drink 24 bottles of water every morning to get to and from work, I would probably be a little more sensitive about the price.
That's a false comparison. If I had to drink 24 bottles of water every morning to get to and from work, I would probably be a little more sensitive about the price.
Plus, you can buy a gallon of distilled or spring water for under a dollar. When you buy the small bottles you're paying for the bottle and a really big "convenience" mark-up.
51.6 mpg
Let me see, 13 miles to work, 13 miles back, 51.6 mpg is just over a half gallon. Work would have to be 75 miles away before I would be using three gallons.