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Cuando hablan de RESILIENCIA, se refieren al modelo.Por eso trabajan a su favor.Hoy es más difícil alquilar que ayer.De comprar ni hablamos.Pruebas, no promesas.
“El rescate no es tan sofisticado como en el terremoto de Turquía, donde había tecnología y donde muchos países enviaron equipos de emergencia”, explica Daniel Timme, jefe de comunicación de Unicef en Afganistán, desde la ciudad de Herat, a tan solo 33 kilómetros del epicentro del más fuerte de los temblores. “Todo es mucho más improvisado, y cuentan con el apoyo de dos países: Irán y Turquía”, añade.
https://www.eleconomista.es/economia/noticias/12486021/10/23/restauradores-y-apartamentos-cargan-contra-collboni-por-su-propuesta-de-mas-impuestos.htmlSaludos.
https://www.eleconomista.es/transportes-turismo/noticias/12484992/10/23/el-gasto-turistico-bate-record-en-verano-con-1355-euros-por-persona-.htmlSaludos.
US inflation higher than expected in SeptemberLatest consumer price index data raises prospect of further rate rise from Federal ReserveUS inflation was higher than forecast in September, raising the prospect that the Federal Reserve may raise interest rates following similarly robust recent data on the strength of the jobs market.The consumer price index rose 3.7 per cent year on year, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, the same pace as the previous month. Economists had expected a slight decline.On a monthly basis, inflation decelerated from 0.6 per cent to 0.4 per cent, thanks in part to lower pressure from energy prices. However, “core” inflation, which strips out volatile energy and food prices, remained steady at 0.3 per cent month on month.Core inflation edged down from 4.3 per cent to 4.1 per cent on a year-on-year basis.Investors and policymakers will be parsing the data given the lack of consensus over the likely path of monetary policy for the rest of the year.Many investors had been willing to look past a recent rebound in the headline inflation rate because it was driven by energy prices. However, stronger than expected jobs data last week fuelled concerns that inflation may be become stuck above the Federal Reserve’s 2 per cent target.The data drove yields on US government debt to their highest levels in 16 years and caused a brief jump in investor expectations that the Fed would raise its benchmark interest rate again before the end of the year.(...)
@jayparsons New CPI data out today, same story: Rent inflation is cooling, and it will keep cooling.Remember: CPI Shelter is unique in that its primary variable (rent or OER) is not real time like food or gas etc. It's lagged by design. So we know with confidence where this train is going: Down, down, down based on what's happening with real-time "street rents" or asking rents.Real-time rents are cooling MUCH faster than CPI is showing or COULD show based on how it's built.And since shelter is the largest category of CPI, it will become less and less of a inflator in headline CPI going forward. Today, CPI less shelter measured 1.9%. But total inflation measured 3.7% due to the 7.1% shelter increase, driven almost entirely by a survey of renters (even for OER... it's primarily the same dataset as "rent of primary residence").CPI Rent/Shelter is always more smoothed than asking rent due to the fact that CPI's version factors in all active leases-- the vast majority of which retain the same rent level from one month to the next, only changing around once a year. So it won't drop as much as asking rent, but it will follow the same pattern.Lastly: There's a lot of talk about "hot" renewals driving up CPI Rent/Shelter. But that's less and less a factor now and going forward. Yes, renewals lag asking rents... but asking rents effectively serve as a cap on renewals. Why? Well, operators can't routinely price renewals above new leases because that would incentivize renters to move out for better deals.That doesn't mean everyone's rent is going down (though some will) or that we're reverting to pre-COVID levels. But it does mean that peak rent inflation is a thing of the past.
https://www.ft.com/content/177d2346-8b74-4e98-9bd3-fd61585cc78aCitarUS inflation higher than expected in SeptemberLatest consumer price index data raises prospect of further rate rise from Federal ReserveUS inflation was higher than forecast in September, raising the prospect that the Federal Reserve may raise interest rates following similarly robust recent data on the strength of the jobs market.The consumer price index rose 3.7 per cent year on year, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, the same pace as the previous month. Economists had expected a slight decline.On a monthly basis, inflation decelerated from 0.6 per cent to 0.4 per cent, thanks in part to lower pressure from energy prices. However, “core” inflation, which strips out volatile energy and food prices, remained steady at 0.3 per cent month on month.Core inflation edged down from 4.3 per cent to 4.1 per cent on a year-on-year basis.Investors and policymakers will be parsing the data given the lack of consensus over the likely path of monetary policy for the rest of the year.Many investors had been willing to look past a recent rebound in the headline inflation rate because it was driven by energy prices. However, stronger than expected jobs data last week fuelled concerns that inflation may be become stuck above the Federal Reserve’s 2 per cent target.The data drove yields on US government debt to their highest levels in 16 years and caused a brief jump in investor expectations that the Fed would raise its benchmark interest rate again before the end of the year.(...)