Time to mobilize the army truck drivers and get this supply problem going. 
I’ve always thought that stagflation is what we are looking at in the coming years. This guy gives a good warning and insights into it. To be clear, he’s on margin bull right now but it’s over once fed raises the rates. He thinks it’s coming soon, very soon. I can see S&P shaving 10-30% very quickly.
@pastora what do you think will happen to Bitcoin once Fed starts raising rates? Will it also go down 30-50%?
If the previous cycle is any indication, 70-80% drop from the peak is likely. If 100k is the peak, maybe it drops to 20k. That’s my load the boat price.
I saw a graph which shows how BTC is maturing every yr and how extreme crashes as compared to initial yrs are reducing. Do you still think it will go back to initial extreme crash?
but I’ll average down from 40k along with other coins.
I can’t find it but there is a recent article that said the wild swings bitcoin used to have are going be less as more institutional money moves in and now that more miners are hodling.
I will continue to look for the article.
This certainly makes sense. As BTC market cap increases and it gains more mainstream acceptance, it should become a less volatile asset. Unfortunately, it’s upside is also probably limited - it won’t go up to $250k or $1M anytime soon.
Here is an article that talks of reduced volatility in BTC rallies going forward
That’s about right. Admin roles have increased about 10x since then. It all goes back to when the government decided to help and make student loan access easy. People stopped paying much attention to costs and demanding all sorts of insane perks as part of the “college experience”.
My encounter with Admin in US is
Go to Singapore to learn how to do Admin 
Terrible article. Data doesn’t support the thesis.
“The indexes for food and shelter in September contributed more than half of the monthly increase. Food rose 0.9%, with food at home jumping 1.2% from the previous month. Energy also jumped 1.3%, with the gasoline index up 1.2%.”
So most everyone - except the rich who spend proportionally far less on those things - will get hit. Consider also marginal tax rates and withholding on the raise.
Glad my income is dividends which, though they may fall in the short to medium term will keep pace with inflation inn the long term and are taxed at only 15% - less, actually, after some deductions.
The working man and woman are hosed.