The latest dismal GDP data probably will cement an official kick-off of Fed's QE2 on Nov. 3. However, as more quantitative easing could further dilute the value of the dollar, pushing up the commodity prices, the system could be pushed beyond its limit into a possible “demand-pull stagflation” scenario.
Democrats--"sadly enough"--would get a shot at still retaining the majority, which would mean the monetary and fiscal policy will most likely stay on its current course. Meanwhile, the 0.25% interest rate hike effective Oct. 20 by the PBoC is "meaningless," because of skyrocketing property prices, and the cost of living inflation has gone up much more than the official figure.
Geithner’s strong dollar comments, China's surprise rate hike, and worries about the U.S. mortgage market led a flight by investors into U.S. Treasuries. Some analysts believe that there may be a currency accord right before the G20 meeting. However, from all indications, China and Geithner appear to be acting under totally separate agendas however “coordinated” they might seem.
Due to the abundance of inventory and supply, crude has remained range-bound, and started to decouple and underperformed other commodities, as well as equities. While high stocks level traps crude, the dollar weakness, on the other hand, has prompted some OPEC members to support $100 oil.
It is clear that companies just aren't ramping up hiring fast enough to reduce the unemployment rate, now 9.6 percent. So where will the U.S. find jobs? Contrary to President Obama's belief, an analysis of the Industry Life Cycle and Supply Chain will show that green tech and manufacturing are unlikely the answers to unemployment.
Eric Schmidt, Google CEO, claims that Android is making money and envisions a potential $10 billion market. However, despite the impressive Android number, keep in mind that the free open source means zero revenue for Google. So in order to evaluate if Android will be the next big revenue stream for Google, one needs to get past the initial excitement arising out of the handsets growth projection.
As of June 2010, China's netizenship climbed to 420 million, more than the population of the entire United States. Some believe the growth rate of China’s internet users will slow along with its economy. Now, McKinsey Quarterly just released a new forecast this week that Asia’s internet users will reach more than 1.1 billion and $80+ billion by 2015.