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El Banco de España detecta un debilitamiento en la economía y baja el ritmo del PIB para 2024 con más inflaciónMantiene su previsión de avance del PIB del 2,3% para este año pero rebaja en cuatro décimas la del año próximo
The Price is Right: nothing screams “bear market in conviction” more than MMFs seeing $1tn of inflows YTD… cash goes to bonds in hard landing, stocks & credit in soft landing, stays in cash & goes to commodities in no landing.
UK inflation posts surprise fall to 6.7%Drop adds pressure on Bank of England to stop raising interest ratesUK inflation was lower than expected in August, falling to 6.7 per cent from 6.8 per cent in July, rather than increasing on the back of higher petrol costs.The drop in almost all measures of inflation surprised economists and will put pressure on the Bank of England to stop raising interest rates and keep them at 5.25 per cent on Thursday.Core inflation — excluding food, alcohol and energy prices — dropped from 6.9 per cent in July to 6.2 per cent in August, while the costs of services were up 6.8 per cent in August compared with a year earlier, a lower inflation rate than 7.4 per cent in July.
CitarUK inflation posts surprise fall to 6.7%Drop adds pressure on Bank of England to stop raising interest ratesUK inflation was lower than expected in August, falling to 6.7 per cent from 6.8 per cent in July, rather than increasing on the back of higher petrol costs.The drop in almost all measures of inflation surprised economists and will put pressure on the Bank of England to stop raising interest rates and keep them at 5.25 per cent on Thursday.Core inflation — excluding food, alcohol and energy prices — dropped from 6.9 per cent in July to 6.2 per cent in August, while the costs of services were up 6.8 per cent in August compared with a year earlier, a lower inflation rate than 7.4 per cent in July.Me temo que Bailey & Co no le van a dar al botón esta vez. La última vez fue un 6-3 para un +0.25. Estado actual:
… Hay que odiar, hay que odiarY aniquilar, aniquilar, vivan los cementeriosAprende a escupir, y aprende a morirTragando saliva… Hay que odiar, hay que odiarY aniquilar, y aniquilar, mantener un imperioLa libertad consiste en vivirAhogados en odio… Esta vida es la muerteNuestra vida es la muerteLos que van a morir te saludanY se cagan en tu puta madre
The World’s Population May Peak in Your Lifetime. What Happens Next?The global human population has been climbing for the past two centuries. But what is normal for all of us alive today — growing up while the world is growing rapidly — may be a blip in human history.Children born today will very likely live to see the end of global population growth.A baby born this year will be 60 in the 2080s, when demographers at the U.N. expect the size of humanity to peak. The Wittgenstein Center for Demography and Global Human Capital in Vienna places the peak in the 2070s. The Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation at the University of Washington puts it in the 2060s. All of the predictions agree on one thing: We peak soon.Because most demographers look ahead only to 2100, there is no consensus on exactly how quickly populations will fall after that. Over the past 100 years, the global population quadrupled, from two billion to eight billion. As long as life continues as it has — with people choosing smaller family sizes, as is now common in most of the world — then in the 22nd or 23rd century, our decline could be just as steep as our rise.Most people now live in countries where two or fewer children are born for every two adults. If all people in the United States today lived through their reproductive years and had babies at an average pace, then it would add up to about 1.66 births per woman. In Europe, that number is 1.5; in East Asia, 1.2; in Latin America, 1.9. Any worldwide average of fewer than two children per two adults means our population shrinks and in the long run each new generation is smaller than the one before. If the world’s fertility rate were the same as in the United States today, then the global population would fall from a peak of around 10 billion to less than two billion about 300 years later, over perhaps 10 generations. And if family sizes remained small, we would continue declining.(...)
@Redfin Gone are the days of affluent homebuyers snatching up second properties with record-low mortgage rates.August marks the 14th-straight month that second-home demand has hovered at least 30% below pre-pandemic levels 👉 http://bit.ly/3roQFZe #mortgagerates