> What is your explanation for the explosion in asset prices over the last year, if not inflation?
Well, a few ideas immediately spring to mind:
a) Historically low interest rates are causing people to chase gains elsewhere. Again, people end up looking to the markets. This has been an ongoing trend exacerbated by...
b) For folks not on the margins, discretionary spending was severely curtailed last year. They had to do something with that extra cash. Many people, during a time of tumult, chose to save. This is only exacerbated a trend that started way back in 2008 due to similar post-disaster psychological scarring. Where did people put the money? Into the markets.
c) Wealth concentration means a huge amount of the cash floating around has landed in the coffers of the largest institutions and individuals. Those institutions aren't using that cash to buy chips at the 7/11. They're either i) saving it, which means putting it into the market, or ii) using it to buy up assets (e.g. acquisitions) which itself bids up prices.
In short: What's going on the market probably has absolutely nothing to do with what's going on on mainstreet.
Of course, that's been true for the last 10 years as folks on the fringes continued to predict hyperinflation post-2008. But, the great thing about disaster predictions is you can always just move the goalposts out...
Well, a few ideas immediately spring to mind:
a) Historically low interest rates are causing people to chase gains elsewhere. Again, people end up looking to the markets. This has been an ongoing trend exacerbated by...
b) For folks not on the margins, discretionary spending was severely curtailed last year. They had to do something with that extra cash. Many people, during a time of tumult, chose to save. This is only exacerbated a trend that started way back in 2008 due to similar post-disaster psychological scarring. Where did people put the money? Into the markets.
c) Wealth concentration means a huge amount of the cash floating around has landed in the coffers of the largest institutions and individuals. Those institutions aren't using that cash to buy chips at the 7/11. They're either i) saving it, which means putting it into the market, or ii) using it to buy up assets (e.g. acquisitions) which itself bids up prices.
In short: What's going on the market probably has absolutely nothing to do with what's going on on mainstreet.
Of course, that's been true for the last 10 years as folks on the fringes continued to predict hyperinflation post-2008. But, the great thing about disaster predictions is you can always just move the goalposts out...