Monday, 11 August 2025

US CPI-PPI Week. G-7 Or D-7? Buffett Indicator At 207 Percent.

Baltic Dry Index. 2051 +43            Brent Crude 66.26

Spot Gold 3378                 US 2 Year Yield 3.76 +0.04

US Federal Debt. 37.216 trillion

US GDP 30.193 trillion.

By a continuing process of inflation, government can confiscate, secretly and unobserved, an important part of the wealth of their citizens.

John Maynard Keynes

It is the silly season once again, as is all too evident in stock casino pricing.

As Trump’s tariff war on the rest of the world increasingly takes effect, what could possibly go wrong?

Plenty, thinks Warren Buffett as he continues to sell out of stocks and pile into US Treasuries.

Tomorrow and Thursday, the latest US inflation figures.

Whoever is compiling the latest numbers will probably be thinking about how the head of the Bureau of Labor Statistics got fired recently for presenting numbers that angered President Trump.  Argentina here we come.

Asia-Pacific markets subdued as U.S.-China tariff truce deadline looms

Updated Mon, Aug 11 2025 11:23 PM EDT

Asia-Pacific markets were trading subdued Monday as investors awaited official announcement on whether the Aug. 12 deadline for U.S.–China tariff truce would be extended.

CATL halts production at key lithium mine after license lapses

Shares of Contemporary Amperex Technology (CATL), China’s leading battery producer, traded flat after it announced that it had stopped operations at a major lithium mine after its license expired.
The Yichun mine in Jiangxi province saw its license lapse on August 9, said CATL. The firm is working to secure a renewal “as soon as possible,” adding that production will resume once approved.

—Lee Ying Shan

Australia central bank is expected to cut rates by 25 points

Economists surveyed by Reuters expect the Reserve Bank of Australia to lower its cash rate by 25 basis points to 3.60% on Aug. 12, after surprising that market by holding rates in July.

Commonwealth Bank of Australia, which participated in the survey, cited in a separate note that RBA’s concerns around market services and durable goods inflation were “largely squashed.”

“The all‑important Q2 25 CPI data has come and gone and confirmed the disinflation impulse in the Australian economy,” CBA economists added.

Australia’s headline inflation rate in the second quarter of the year came in at 2.1% year over year, slipping to its lowest point since March 2021.

—Lee Ying Shan

China markets open higher as U.S.-China tariff truce deadline nears

China markets opened marginally higher as traders kept an eye out for indicators that the Aug. 12 deadline for U.S.–China tariff truce would be extended.

The mainland’s benchmark CSI 300 climbed 0.13%, while Hong Kong’s Hang Seng Index inched 0.07% higher.

Morgan Stanley said in a note that the Hong Kong market is likely to “resume its momentum” some time after the summer, assuming improved clarity on the U.S.-China trade relations, as well as the reveal of the next five-year growth plan for China.

—Lee Ying Shan

South Korea, Australia markets start the trading day mixed

South Korea and Australia markets started the trading day mixed. South Korea’s Kospi as well as the small-cap Kosdaq were trading flat.

Australia’s S&P/ASX 200 inched 0.43% higher. The Australian central bank is scheduled to announce its interest-rate decision on Tuesday.

—Lee Ying Shan

Asia markets live: RBA meeting, Kospi, CSI 300

Stock futures tick higher ahead of key inflation data expected this week: Live updates

Updated Sun, Aug 10 2025 6:17 PM EDT

U.S. stock futures inched higher Sunday night, with the market once again on the cusp of all-time highs ahead of a week of key inflation reports.

Dow Jones Industrial Average futures rose by 56 points, or 0.1%. S&P 500 futures and Nasdaq 100 futures climbed 0.1% and 0.1%, respectively.

Those moves come after the Nasdaq Composite ended last week at fresh closing highs, and the S&P 500 closed on the threshold of another milestone. The Dow also finished the week on a high note. A rally in Apple — which has been a significant laggard this year — helped bolster the market.

The latest advance has some investors wondering how much longer the stock market can skirt pitfalls, given sky-high valuations, a dimming macroeconomic outlook, and tariff fallout all during a period of seasonal weakness.

“We are probably going to be more in a digestion phase than anything else,” said Jay Woods, chief global strategist at Freedom Capital Markets. He added, “We may get a little bit of sideways action in this market, which is not a bad thing.”

Inflation readings this week will prove a key hurdle for a broad market index near record highs. The consumer price index, which is set to be released Tuesday, and the producer price index, due out Thursday, will be critical in shaping the outlook for the direction of interest rates, especially for the Federal Reserve’s September meeting. Hotter inflation prints could hinder the market’s advance.

“The most important thing is the CPI data,” Woods said. “That will definitely dictate monetary policy.”

The inflation data comes ahead of the Fed’s Jackson Hole meeting in Wyoming on Aug. 21-23, which will likely set the tone for the September meeting.

Stock market today: Live updates

Wall Street Week Ahead

Aug. 10, 2025 6:23 AM ET

Wall Street's focus this week will be on key inflation data and on any further developments around trade and Russia and Ukraine.

A busy economic calendar will take center stage, with the July consumer price index and producer price index reports due on Tuesday and Thursday, respectively. Market participants and monetary policymakers will be keeping a close eye on the data for any effects of U.S. President Donald Trump's tariffs on consumer and producer prices. Friday will see the retail sales reading for July. 

The main event on Friday will be a scheduled meeting between Trump and Russian President Vladimir Putin. Trump has expressed hope that a truce could be near and could involve "some swapping of territories" between Russia and Ukraine, a proposal that Ukrainian leader Volodymyr Zelenskyy contested. WTI crude oil futures (
CL1:COM) will be on watch.

Turning to the earnings season, Dow 30 component Cisco (
CSCO) will headline another busy few days of quarterly results.

Wall Street Week Ahead | Seeking Alpha

At 207%, the Warren Buffett indicator says the stock market could crash!

August 10, 2025

Billionaire investor Warren Buffett has shared a lot of wisdom throughout his successful career. However, one gem to come off his desk is the Buffett Indicator – a simple comparison of the US stock market’s total value divided by US GDP.

As Buffett puts it, the indicator is “probably the best single measure of where valuations stand at any given moment”. And for value investors, knowing when the stock market is overpriced is a powerful advantage, even when relying only on index funds.

However, looking at the Buffett Indicator today might cause some concern.

US stocks are expensive

Historically, his Indicator has sat between 90% and 135%. This healthy range generally indicates that US stocks are fairly-to-slightly overvalued and presents an ideal window of opportunity to top up on investments. But following the tremendous artificial intelligence (AI)-driven returns of 2023 and 2024, the indicator’s been rising. So much so that it now sits at a whopping 207%!

That’s the highest it’s ever been since records began in the 1970s. And it’s even higher than the 194% peak seen in late 2021, right before US stocks experienced one of the most severe market corrections seen in over a decade.

That would certainly explain why Buffett and his team at investment vehicle Berkshire Hathaway have been busy selling stocks lately. In fact, the firm just marked its 11th consecutive quarter of being a net seller, with positions such as Bank of AmericaCitigroup, and Capital One all getting trimmed, or outright sold off.

So could another stock market downturn be just around the corner?

More

At 207%, the Warren Buffett indicator says the stock market could crash!

Up next, who would want to be a commodities copper trader?

Chile's Codelco gets approval from labor inspector to restart El Teniente operations

9 August 2025

SANTIAGO (Reuters) - Copper miner Codelco received authorization from Chile's labor inspector office to begin resuming certain operations at its flagship El Teniente copper mine, it said on Saturday, after more than a week of suspended operations following a deadly collapse that killed six workers.

In a statement, Codelco said operations can resume in areas not affected by the July 31 collapse, including Pilar Norte, Panel Esmeralda, Pacifico Superior, Diablo Regimiento, and others, while sections such as Recursos Norte and Andesita remain suspended, pending further inspections.

The decision allows Codelco, the world's largest copper producer, to partially restart activities at one of its key divisions, potentially easing operational disruptions.

Chile's mining regulator had given the green light for a partial restart on Friday evening, but the company needed the labor inspection office to sign off on the plan before resuming mining activity at a time when the miner grapples with production challenges.

The El Teniente division is expected to announce its detailed plan for restarting operations along with safety measures to ensure compliance with labor authority requirements. Inspections in suspended areas will continue before a full restart can be authorized.

El Teniente, which is more than a century old, spans more than 4,500 km (2,800 miles) of tunnels and underground galleries deep within the Andes mountains.

Chile's Codelco gets approval from labor inspector to restart El Teniente operations

Chile copper mine damage worse than first thought, inspection shows

August 8, 2025 | 10:14 am

Inspections have shown damage to 3,700 meters (12,000 feet) of tunnel at the El Teniente mine in Chile, according to the Public Prosecutor’s Office. That would be five times more than initial calculations of 300 meters with severe damage and another 400 meters with moderate damage given by the state-owned company.

Damage was identified not only in Andesita, a new section of the mine scheduled to ramp up over the coming years, but also in the Recursos Norte section, Aquiles Cubillos, regional prosecutor of O’Higgins, told reporters Thursday.

Damage at Recursos Norte, which began producing in early 2020, may restrict Codelco’s plans to resume mining at older areas of the complex. The collapse is a major setback for the company’s effort to recover from a yearslong slump and threatens to further tighten a copper market already disrupted by the threat of tariffs and stoppages at other mines.

Codelco declined to comment further on Friday, citing an active investigation into the incident that killed six people and injured nine.

(By James Attwood)

Chile copper mine damage worse than first thought, inspection shows - MINING.COM

Or a commodities silver or gold trader?

HSBC raises silver price outlook on gold strength, geopolitical risks

8 August 2025

(Reuters) -HSBC has lifted its silver price forecasts for 2025, 2026, and 2027, citing strong support from high gold prices and safe-haven demand in the face of geopolitical and economic uncertainty.

The bank now expects average silver prices of $35.14 per ounce in 2025, up from $30.28 previously, $33.96 in 2026, against an earlier forecast of $26.95, and $31.79 in 2027, versus $28.30 formerly.

While silver prices have surged, HSBC cautioned that the rally is "due more to silver's relationship with gold than (to) underlying fundamentals", with record-high gold exerting a "strong gravitational pull" on silver.

Spot gold prices are up 29% so far this year after hitting a record $3,500 per ounce in April with the U.S. and China in the midst of a full-blown trade war, which triggered moves into safe-haven assets.

HSBC said that after four years of record-high growth, industrial demand for silver may edge lower this year, although any declines are likely to be limited. It said demand would likely recover in 2026, driven by key sectors such as the photovoltaic industry and electronics.

----On the supply side, silver mine output continues to rise at a modest pace, HSBC said.

The bank's supply-demand model projects a silver deficit of 206 million ounces in 2025, widening from a 167 million ounce deficit in 2024. That is expected to narrow to 126 million ounces in 2026.

HSBC also said a weaker U.S. dollar this year, as forecast by HSBC research, is silver positive, while ongoing debates over Federal Reserve rate cuts and central bank policies could impact prices going forward.

HSBC raises silver price outlook on gold strength, geopolitical risks

White House to issue order ‘clarifying’ tariff on gold bars

Move follows surge in precious metal’s price after FT revealed US levy on imports

PublishedAug 8 2025 UpdatedAug 8 2025, 20:44

Donald Trump will issue an executive order “clarifying” the US’s stance on gold bar tariffs, after a ruling that a widely-traded form of the precious metal is subject to levies sent shockwaves through the bullion market.

“The White House intends to issue an executive order in the near future clarifying misinformation about the tariffing of gold bars and other speciality products,” a White House official said on Friday.

On Thursday, the Customs and Border Protection agency had published a ruling, which was first reported by the Financial Times, saying one-kilo and 100-ounce gold bars should be classified with a customs code that is subject to tariffs. Its decision stood in sharp contrast to a previous White House statement in April that bullion would be exempt from Trump’s levies.

Gold for December delivery dropped by 1 per cent to $3,460 per troy ounce on Friday after the FT reported on the White House’s plan to clarify its tariff. The precious metal had jumped to a record high earlier after the US blindsided the global bullion market by imposing tariffs on imports of one-kilo and 100-ounce bars — a staple in the global precious metals market.

The London Bullion Market Association, which represents large institutional gold traders and banks, said on Friday evening that it was “seeking clarification” from US authorities.

The US Comex is the world’s largest financial market for bullion, but to function efficiently the market relies on having unfettered access to the physical gold market centred on London — which would be threatened by any levies, according to market participants.

Many in the gold industry have questioned whether the CBP ruling, which was written in response to an inquiry from a Swiss refiner, could have been a bureaucratic mistake.

 “The US has to decide if the White House was wrong in April, or if the CBP is wrong now,” said one executive.

Switzerland was dealt a particularly heavy blow as a result of the US’s tariffs decision, since the country is the world’s largest refining hub.

The tariff ruling would “negatively impact” the flow of physical gold around the world, noted the Swiss Association of Manufacturers and Traders in Precious Metals Association in a statement on Friday.

More

White House to issue order ‘clarifying’ tariff on gold bars

In other news, AI is coming for (mostly) white collar jobs.

The next jobs downturn could mean an AI-induced purge of millions of workers

Aug 6, 2025 

The big picture: In the last several economic cycles, recessions have been a period in which companies opportunistically ramped up their use of automation to lower their long-term need for workers.

  • If that pattern holds, AI-driven productivity gains and job losses are likely to be more severe in any bumpy period for the overall economy.
  • If last week's soft jobs report and negative revisions turn out to be an early warning sign of a broader labor market downturn, this moment of rapid technological change could make it particularly painful.

Zoom out: When times turn tough, it heightens the urgency for companies seeking to use technology to supplant expensive labor.

  • U.S. manufacturing employment fell 26% from 2000 to 2019, for example, in significant part due to productivity-enhancing automation.
  • But it was not anything close to a straight line. Rather, there were steep declines in the 2001 recession and its aftermath and then in the 2008 recession and its aftermath. Manufacturing employment was steadier between those episodes.
  • If AI eventually replaces many white-collar jobs, that pattern suggests the impact on the job market would be most intense during a period of economic weakness.

Between the lines: This dynamic helps explain why the 1991, 2001 and 2008 recessions experienced long, "jobless" recoveries in which employment did not rebound nearly as quickly as GDP did.

  • In those downturns, output bounced back but unemployment remained elevated for years.

What they're saying: "[W]e think that during the course of the next recession the speed and the breadth of the adoption of the AI tools and applications in the workplace might induce large scale displacement for occupations that consist of primarily non-routine cognitive tasks," wrote Murat Tasci, a senior U.S. economist at JPMorgan, in a note.

  • "If firms face a costly adaptation process for automation to replace workers, then the cost of adjustment comes down during recessions when the opportunity cost of not producing is relatively low," Tasci added.

More

AI might purge millions of workers in next jobs downturn, recession

Global Inflation/Stagflation/Recession Watch.

Given our Magic Money Tree central banksters and our spendthrift politicians, inflation now needs an entire section of its own.

US Dollar Devaluation: A Global Currency Collapse Is Coming

Lena Petrova  Aug 10, 2025

The Coming Global Currency Crisis: Why the World's Strongest Economies Are On the Brink

In a world shaped by decades of economic growth, fiscal stimulus, and cheap borrowing, we now find ourselves at a moment few thought possible: the most powerful economies on Earth are standing on the edge of a global currency crisis. Unlike the isolated collapses seen in emerging markets throughout the 20th century, this time it's different—and more dangerous.

This crisis isn’t brewing in some fragile developing country. It’s centered in the core of the global financial system: the G7. The United States, Canada, the United Kingdom, France, Germany, Italy, and Japan—all once hailed as pillars of fiscal stability—now carry sovereign debt levels that exceed the size of their economies. For the first time in modern history, all seven are simultaneously vulnerable.

Economists are beginning to refer to this group as the “D-7”—a dark rebranding that reflects their unsustainable debt-to-GDP ratios, aggressive monetary policies, and a system under extreme strain. What makes this situation so unprecedented is that it’s happening in a high-interest-rate environment. In 2020, borrowing was essentially free. Today, it's anything but.

The Debt Spiral and Interest Rate Shock

The roots of this crisis lie in the aftermath of two historic shocks: the 2008 global financial crisis and the COVID-19 pandemic. In both cases, governments flooded the economy with stimulus, taking on massive amounts of new debt to stabilize financial systems. But what was manageable in a low-rate world has now become a ticking time bomb due to the cost of servicing that debt.

In the United States, 30-year Treasury bond yields are nearing 5%. Other G7 nations face similar scenarios. Governments are rolling over trillions in maturing bonds and locking in dramatically higher interest payments. Investors are growing anxious. Cracks in the system are beginning to show.

But the problem isn’t just the size of the debt. It’s the speed at which the cost of debt is rising—and the increasing likelihood that central banks and governments will be forced into drastic action.

How Currency Crises Begin

The early warning signs are flashing red. When investors lose faith in a government's ability to manage its finances, they begin to sell off sovereign bonds. That triggers a second, more dangerous wave: the selloff of the country’s currency. This is how currency collapses begin.

We've seen this before. France in the 1950s. The UK in the 1960s. Italy in the 1990s. Thailand, South Korea, and Indonesia during the 1997 Asian financial crisis. The difference now is scale—and interconnection.

The G-7 countries don’t just carry debt in their own currencies—they also hold reserves in each other's currencies. If one major economy starts to fall, the entire system feels the shock. This creates a dangerous feedback loop that could drag down multiple currencies at once, leading to a cascading global devaluation.

Inflation, Devaluation, and the Domino Effect

In theory, governments have an "escape hatch": they can inflate their way out of debt. By printing more money, they reduce the real value of what they owe. But that short-term fix comes at an enormous cost: rising inflation, falling purchasing power, and the erosion of public trust in the financial system.

As inflation spreads, countries are forced to make painful decisions. If the U.S. dollar begins to fall—whether by policy choice or market forces—other countries like Canada, Mexico, and China would face immediate pressure to devalue their currencies just to stay competitive in global trade. This is how a domino effect forms.

This isn’t a hypothetical scenario. In 1967, when the UK devalued the pound, several European countries followed. The same thing happened in Asia in the late '90s. What’s different now is that we’re not talking about emerging markets—we’re talking about the global financial core.

More

US Dollar Devaluation: A Global Currency Collapse Is Coming

Rice prices plunge to 8-year low after record harvests

9 August 2025

Global rice prices have tumbled to their lowest level in eight years, in a blow to many farmers across Asia, as record harvests and the ending of export bans in India flood the market with supply.

Export prices for Thai 5 per cent broken white rice, the global benchmark, have dropped to $372.50 per tonne in recent days, a 26 per cent decline since late last year and their lowest level since 2017. That extends a slide that began after India, the world’s largest exporter, started lifting restrictions on shipments in September 2024.

The UN’s All Rice Price index is down 13 per cent this year, according to the body’s Food and Agriculture Organization.

“It’s that simple: there’s just too much stock,” said Samarendu Mohanty, director of the Centre for Sustainable Agriculture and Development Studies at Professor Jayashankar Telangana State Agricultural University. “India’s rice production last year was a record . The crop they just planted is going to be another record crop.”

The price decline marks a sharp reversal from early last year, when rice soared to its highest level since 2008 after India introduced a series of export curbs. That sparked a wave of panic buying among consumers and prompted protectionist measures in other producing countries.

India’s policy shift late last year, following a record harvest in 2023-24 that swelled government inventories, was “the main reason” for the dramatic drop in prices, said Oscar Tjakra, senior analyst at Rabobank.

“This comes on top of strong production in Thailand and Vietnam, which has taken global rice output to a record high this marketing year,” he added. 

Demand, meanwhile, has fallen. Indonesia, one of the biggest buyers, frontloaded imports last year and has not re-entered the market in 2025. The Philippines has banned imports until October to protect domestic prices during its main harvest.

“Indonesia is out, the Philippines is out — there’s no demand for white rice right now,” Mohanty said.

India’s unusually strong supply position reflects advances in the country’s agriculture, he said. Almost all the farms in the country’s main rice-growing regions have irrigation systems now, making production more resilient to drought and increasingly erratic monsoons, he said. “India has monsoon-proofed rice production.”

Farmers are also increasingly buying new seeds each season, which boosts yields, and expanding acreage of rice, thanks to the country’s minimum support price system and state bonuses, which helps shield farmers from global price swings. “Farmers know paddy is the most attractive crop. You get an MSP, you get a bonus, and it’s less risky,” said Mohanty. 

More

Rice prices plunge to 8-year low after record harvests

Covid-19 Corner

This section will continue only occasionally when something of interest occurs.

 

Technology Update.

With events happening fast in the development of solar power and graphene, among other things, I’ve added this section. Updates as they get reported.

Today, a problem that will only get much worse. Approx. 4 minutes.

EV Burns After Sitting 2 Years – TWICE!

EV Burns After Sitting 2 Years – TWICE! - YouTube

Next, the world global debt clock. Nations debts to GDP compared.

World Debt Clocks (usdebtclock.org)

The consequences of inflation are malinvestment, waste, a wanton redistribution of wealth and income, the growth of speculation and gambling, immorality and corruption, disillusionment, social resentment, discontent, upheaval and riots, bankruptcy, increased government controls, and eventual collapse.

Henry Hazlitt

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