Dell laying off 12,500 people, citing (what else?) an AI pivot.
Well, yes, over time that's probably true. But it also depends on how unbalanced the distribution is. For someone making over 100k for example, they're not going spend 100% of their disposable income. So folks making that kind of money aren't going to contribute as much to the economy in terms of spending. Yes, now they're richer but a 5% increase for them probably isn't going to have much of an effect on their spending patterns and that's what counts from an economic perspective.But, looping back to the topic (yesterday's stock market crash), the stock market is a macroeconomic measure. Individual differences in the microeconomic scale have almost nothing to do with stock market (individual differences will impact politics far more than the economy). Averages are what really matter with stock markets.
Dell laying off 12,500 people, citing (what else?) an AI pivot.
No. The article is suggesting HR is overwhelmed due to the # of layoffs, not that 12,500 HR jobs are eliminated.This article seems to suggest it's all HR jobs too.
.75 cut would be very high. I'd be mildly surprised if they do .5.I wouldn't be surprised if they do a .75 cut next month. So if you're only getting 2 or 3% on those, the price won't go down any more but it's not going up either.
The US Fed has what they call a dual mandate - inflation and employment.
The problem with EU is that each country has its own economy which differ in size and how it works. So they have to find a middle ground,which might not be optimal, the farther away you are.How's the EU economy doing? The US Fed has what they call a dual mandate - inflation and employment. ECB doesn't have that problem IIRC. So the only reason to cut is if the economy is slowing down.
That's really interesting. Thank you.The problem with EU is that each country has its own economy which differ in size and how it works. So they have to find a middle ground,which might not be optimal, the farther away you are.
From this list you can see the inflation in the Eurozone varies from 0.6 to 5.5 depending on which country you are in.
So where to set the rate?
Euro area annual inflation up to 2.6%
Overview Euro area annual inflation is expected to be 2.6% in July 2024, up from 2.5% in June according to a flash estimate from Eurostat, the statistical office of the European Union. Looking at the main components of euro area inflation, services is expected to have the highest annual rate in...ec.europa.eu
Different countries have different national debt, different work forces, different taxation, different government/public administration, different legislations etc. So, it's much more diverse than the US market.That's really interesting. Thank you.
It's seems a little strange since you just have one currency though, unless inflation stats aren't based on the Euro but some other state-specific metric.
But if inflation is 2.6%, a cut is feasible. I suppose you'd have to start looking at other factors. Is inflation cooling or accelerating. Are you having increased unemployment across the Eurozone? Things like that.
Good PPI numbers came out today: 2.2% change the last 12 months. That just about perfectly nails the fed's target. Stocks are rising. CPI comes out tomorrow. If that is bad (since CPI is broader than the PPI but it also lags PPI), then stocks might have that sell off. But, I really don't see a very bad CPI happening.Big economic report tomorrow. I see a sell off.
So far, nopeBig economic report tomorrow. I see a sell off.