Not exactly a slow day here on TWW, but I'm curious what everyone thinks the future holds. I realize predictions don't mean crap, but they're fun to make anyway. So, predict the direction these indicators will take over the next month:The DOW stock indicator, currently 10,667 {up, down, neutral}Price of oil, currently $68.35 {up, down, neutral}Unemployment rate, currently 4.9% {up, down, neutral}My predictions:DOW up, presuming Iran settles down or manages to be ignored. Oil down, against presuming the Iran question gets answered.Unemployment rate, neutral but downish. What does everyone else think?
1/22/2006 8:59:40 PM
i don't know much aobut the others, but oil up.
1/22/2006 9:28:08 PM
the light at the end of the tunnel is a train.
1/22/2006 9:31:25 PM
Dow - Down slightly, because Iran has found a way to make people with money scared.Oil - Up to almost $72 (wheee fake predictions), because Iran is scary.Unemployment - Neutral, maybe up slightly, because oil prices are going to scare companies again.
1/22/2006 10:22:01 PM
DOW: up to 11,000Oil: Roughly Neutral, ~$70Unemployment: Down to 4.7%
1/22/2006 10:25:55 PM
Dow - downoil - upunemployment - upCmon bursting of real estate bubble. I need to buy a house
1/22/2006 11:27:07 PM
I predict that my new photoshop creation will not have much use or value.
1/22/2006 11:41:01 PM
I'll say the DOW will go back to 11,000, but then fall back to around 10,500, and hover there.Oil will go to about $72 (Guess I'm w/Mindstorm on this)Unemployment rate will go down by about .1%The 1st two depend on Iran, as LoneSnark said. If everything works out, then the DOW would go way up in my mind. However, I just don't see that happening yet.
1/23/2006 7:56:06 AM
that metric is now an inverted curve... i forget the name of it, but it tracks short-term interest rates vs. long term interest rates.every time short-term rates became higher than long-term rates, the economy was in a recession the next year. this has been true for the past nine recessions, according to USA Today (ya i know ok)
1/23/2006 10:35:52 AM
1/23/2006 11:10:23 AM
1/23/2006 11:19:20 AM
^ How do you figure? There are different types of inflation. Monetary expansion will drive employment for the near-term, but shock drive inflation, such as oil prices, would be neutral at best, most likely driving unemployment higher as customers have less money to buy goods/services.
1/23/2006 11:32:21 AM
I don't know the answer or even have a good guess, but I think the long-term impact of Iran is being overrated.
1/23/2006 11:34:48 AM
I agree. Iran is going to turn out to be just another scare of the day.
1/23/2006 11:37:49 AM
Given that this inverse relationship is only theory and hasn't help up in all circumstances (stagflation), it has held up in many of the cases.I'm assuming here that higher oil prices will bring higher inflation (which should make sense to most). If that happens, then trace the phillips cuve and see what happens to unemployment.
1/23/2006 11:42:18 AM
^(Abonorio, damn I am way late) Oil is a driver of inflation, but not the only one. The relationship between oil and inflation is one of appearance: if oil rises, it appears that the dollar cannot buy as much as before. It could be, however, the price of oil will be a completely different beast than it has been historically. An upward trend in a commodity doesn't imply a weaker dollar. It only reflects the current state of the demand and supply of the commodity.
1/23/2006 11:48:07 AM
1/23/2006 11:58:19 AM
1/23/2006 11:59:40 AM
DG, only two hits on Google News (Reuters and The Durka Durka Times). Is "Energy Intelligence" who released the article a lobbying firm? Sounds a little suspicious...
1/23/2006 12:11:45 PM
^^ Inflation by itself does not breed employment, it is monetary expansion that drives employment in this way. Oil prices, by the way, are independent of monetary expansion. We can have high oil prices and high monetary contraction, with resultant high unemployment.
1/23/2006 1:51:03 PM
I know who to ask:NASTRADAMUS!
1/23/2006 1:55:50 PM
I find that the best predictions about economics are based on broad, cursory samples of previous events.
1/23/2006 10:52:59 PM
Wow. Abonorio really doesn't understand the Phillips Curve at all.
1/23/2006 11:26:34 PM
maybe he should write a column about it
1/23/2006 11:35:11 PM
Maybe I should.How don't I get the phillips curve? Inverse relationship between inflation and unemployment. I could take someone without an ounce of econ education in them and trace things on that graph and they would understand. It's a pretty simple concept.ABout that column... I wish I still wrote I'm sure more than half of Technician readership are happy that I don't still write.
1/24/2006 10:26:36 AM
super ben,i dunno, but here's their websitehttp://www.piwpubs.com/
1/24/2006 10:37:00 AM
Short term:Dow Down.Price of Oil up.Unemployment up.The scare with Iran will continue to overinflate oil prices for the next couple of months creating a dampening effect on the US economy through spring into the traditionally sluggish summer. The slightly sluggish economy will cause new home sales to continue to fall (a factor that has sustained economic growth so far) and US consumers will become more conservative and spend less. I don't want to say recession but until the US economy adapts to the new situation things will seem pretty bleak.Long Term-Dow UpOil steadyUnemployment down
1/24/2006 11:25:39 AM
within 2006DOW: up to 11,000NASDAQ: up to 2,620Oil: Break the $75 mark at some point, and settle around $72-73Unemployment: Down to 4.8% (number of underemployed people up from current by the end of the year)Price of Gold: $600/oz
1/24/2006 12:05:47 PM
^ meant to say number of underemployed up 8% from current"underemployed" are unemployed people who have remained jobless long enough (6 months) to lose unemployment benefits.don't let the term "unemployment" fool you. there will be a considerable amount of pain felt before things really turn around.
1/24/2006 12:09:37 PM
eh[Edited on January 24, 2006 at 1:31 PM. Reason : a]
1/24/2006 1:30:38 PM
bttt
2/13/2006 5:10:04 PM
Check back w/me in about a month.
2/13/2006 8:35:59 PM
2/14/2006 2:11:26 AM
2/14/2006 7:26:25 AM
So, not quite a month yes, 8 days short, but here is where we are so far:The DOW stock indicator, was 10,667, went up to 10,932Price of oil, was $68.35, went down to $61.24Unemployment rate, was 4.9%, went down to 4.7%I got a 3.0 out of 3.0, depending on whether or not you accept "downish" to mean "down". radu got the next closest score (2.5) (said neutral, it wen't down)SandSanta and skokiaan got the lowest scores, (0.0)[Edited on February 14, 2006 at 10:42 AM. Reason : .,.]
2/14/2006 10:42:33 AM
this is early in the yearwe'll have to keep bumping this to see how it goes through the year, and at the end of
2/14/2006 11:54:17 AM
^ over the next year?
2/14/2006 12:27:11 PM
my bad
2/14/2006 12:39:09 PM