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Fed used the word "recession" in the statement released today


JaiBalayyaaa

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4 hours ago, ARYA said:

Watching the news..

Core inflation is wiped out antunnaru..

Mari why they want to push the economy to mild recession again 🙄

Its called “controlled recession”

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4 hours ago, ARYA said:

Watching the news..

Core inflation is wiped out antunnaru..

Mari why they want to push the economy to mild recession again 🙄

They are likely to increase interest rates again, but market has priced in reduced interest rates for later this year. Banks will fall out by the end of the year at this rate. 

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39 minutes ago, Mr Mirchi said:

Its called “controlled recession”

lol...

i think...we moved away and too far...from that stage..

to bring the money circulation to pre pandemic level is tough job...

this sheet..will haunt us at least next 2 to 3 years...

GtHEUJm.png

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5 hours ago, ARYA said:

Watching the news..

Core inflation is wiped out antunnaru..

Mari why they want to push the economy to mild recession again 🙄

Core inflation went up bro compared to last month from 5.5 to 5.6% and that’s key to Fed 

so dani anthu chuse varaku Fed taggadu 

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8 minutes ago, dasari4kntr said:

lol...

i think...we moved away and too far...from that stage..

to bring the money circulation to pre pandemic level is tough job...

this sheet..will haunt us at least next 2 to 3 years...

GtHEUJm.png

Koncham easy ga common ppl ki ardham ayye charts/analysis unte share cheyyi bro…aa chart tho not able to interpret much

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1 minute ago, stonks_pro said:

Koncham easy ga common ppl ki ardham ayye charts/analysis unte share cheyyi bro…aa chart tho not able to interpret much

revisit the above chart with this "my fav chatGPT-4 description "..lol..sorry and excuse me for this brag..you need to see other thread for this brag.. 

but anyway...jokes apart...read this bro...

 

M1 and M2 are measures of the money supply in an economy. They represent different levels of liquidity or the ease with which assets can be used for transactions or converted to cash.

M1 Money Supply: M1 includes the most liquid forms of money. It consists of:

  • Currency held by the public (such as dollar bills and coins)
  • Checking account deposits
  • Traveler's checks
  • Other demand deposits

M1 is considered "narrow money" because it only includes the most liquid assets that can be used directly for transactions.

M2 Money Supply: M2 is a broader measure of the money supply and includes everything in M1 plus additional less liquid assets. These additional assets include:

  • Savings deposits
  • Small time deposits (certificates of deposit under $100,000)
  • Balances in retail money market mutual funds

M2 is considered "broad money" because it encompasses both liquid assets used for transactions and less liquid assets that can be converted to cash or used for transactions with some delay.

In addition to M1 and M2, there are other measures of money supply, such as M3 and MZM (Money Zero Maturity), though these are less commonly used.

M3 Money Supply: M3 is an even broader measure of the money supply that includes everything in M2 plus larger, less liquid assets such as:

  • Large time deposits (certificates of deposit over $100,000)
  • Institutional money market mutual fund balances
  • Repurchase agreements
  • Eurodollars

M3 is no longer officially reported by the Federal Reserve in the United States, but it is still used by some other central banks around the world.

MZM (Money Zero Maturity): MZM is a measure of the money supply that includes all financial assets redeemable at par value on demand, without any restrictions or penalties. It includes everything in M2, minus small time deposits, plus institutional money market funds and other short-term liquid assets.

These measures help economists and policymakers analyze the money supply, liquidity, and the overall health of an economy. M1 and M2 are the most widely used measures, while M3 and MZM are used less frequently.

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5 minutes ago, dasari4kntr said:

revisit the above chart with this "my fav chatGPT-4 description "..lol..sorry and excuse me for this brag..you need to see other thread for this brag.. 

but anyway...jokes apart...read this bro...

 

M1 and M2 are measures of the money supply in an economy. They represent different levels of liquidity or the ease with which assets can be used for transactions or converted to cash.

M1 Money Supply: M1 includes the most liquid forms of money. It consists of:

  • Currency held by the public (such as dollar bills and coins)
  • Checking account deposits
  • Traveler's checks
  • Other demand deposits

M1 is considered "narrow money" because it only includes the most liquid assets that can be used directly for transactions.

M2 Money Supply: M2 is a broader measure of the money supply and includes everything in M1 plus additional less liquid assets. These additional assets include:

  • Savings deposits
  • Small time deposits (certificates of deposit under $100,000)
  • Balances in retail money market mutual funds

M2 is considered "broad money" because it encompasses both liquid assets used for transactions and less liquid assets that can be converted to cash or used for transactions with some delay.

In addition to M1 and M2, there are other measures of money supply, such as M3 and MZM (Money Zero Maturity), though these are less commonly used.

M3 Money Supply: M3 is an even broader measure of the money supply that includes everything in M2 plus larger, less liquid assets such as:

  • Large time deposits (certificates of deposit over $100,000)
  • Institutional money market mutual fund balances
  • Repurchase agreements
  • Eurodollars

M3 is no longer officially reported by the Federal Reserve in the United States, but it is still used by some other central banks around the world.

MZM (Money Zero Maturity): MZM is a measure of the money supply that includes all financial assets redeemable at par value on demand, without any restrictions or penalties. It includes everything in M2, minus small time deposits, plus institutional money market funds and other short-term liquid assets.

These measures help economists and policymakers analyze the money supply, liquidity, and the overall health of an economy. M1 and M2 are the most widely used measures, while M3 and MZM are used less frequently.

Interview Crying GIF

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8 minutes ago, dasari4kntr said:

 people and companies have more money reserves…avi end ayyi waraku inflation or recession aagadhu ani cheptunna..bro

So companies will not deposit their reserves back int o market  for increased job growth and will use it as reserve until inflation returns to normal value ?

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4 minutes ago, kakatiya said:

So companies will not deposit their reserves back int o market  for increased job growth and will use it as reserve until inflation returns to normal value ?

companies use those reserves for survival also..some (who are low in that reserves ) may fire employees also to reduce operational expenditure …

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11 minutes ago, dasari4kntr said:

companies use those reserves for survival also..some (who are low in that reserves ) may fire employees also to reduce operational expenditure …

How soon before they start removing the blue collar workers,what does your forecast suggest ? Because the recession won't take complete ground until the blue collar employees begin to lose jobs 

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21 minutes ago, dasari4kntr said:

 people and companies have more money reserves…avi end ayyi waraku inflation or recession aagadhu ani cheptunna..bro

Idi chicken n egg problem la undi kada bro….recession end ayye varaku ppl n companies won’t spend money…mari ela? How ya 

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10 minutes ago, kakatiya said:

How soon before they start removing the blue collar workers,what does your forecast suggest ? Because the recession won't take complete ground until the blue collar employees begin to lose jobs 

we don’t know that…

after recent AI trends…companies might need more blue collar workers than white collar…that too until robotics fully emerge…

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4 minutes ago, stonks_pro said:

Idi chicken n egg problem la undi kada bro….recession end ayye varaku ppl n companies won’t spend money…mari ela? How ya 

dont spend…

but who are spending at this time they will pay the price…

egg got to be broken somewhere…curve has to be bend somewhere…that’s who is spending…(not day to day activities but bigger expenses)

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