All_Pro_Bills Posted June 4 Posted June 4 3 hours ago, Homelander said: The current Atlanta Federal Reserve Q2 2025 GDP estimate is 4.6%.
AlBUNDY4TDS Posted June 4 Posted June 4 1 hour ago, All_Pro_Bills said: The current Atlanta Federal Reserve Q2 2025 GDP estimate is 4.6%. He's a troll. That's your answer. No need for further explanation. Ignore or make fun of him. He's turning on the dems on this board for not being dem enough. Grab your popcorn.
Homelander Posted June 4 Posted June 4 Even more news that @BillsFanNCand @B-Man would rather you scroll past, because we’re 134 days deep into ‘Day 1’ and not a single goddamn thing has been "fixed" - his promises, his words, not mine. But hey, keep clutching those pearls and pretending that LGTBQ and the former black press secretary is the problem.
AlBUNDY4TDS Posted June 4 Posted June 4 20 minutes ago, Homelander said: Even more news that @BillsFanNCand @B-Man would rather you scroll past, because we’re 134 days deep into ‘Day 1’ and not a single goddamn thing has been "fixed" - his promises, his words, not mine. But hey, keep clutching those pearls and pretending that LGTBQ and the former black press secretary is the problem. What a pathetic existence you must have.
Trump_is_Mentally_fit Posted 6 hours ago Author Posted 6 hours ago Higher prices and less inventory https://www.cnbc.com/2025/06/27/deep-inside-economy-more-sticker-prices-start-to-go-up-due-to-tariffs.html The latest inflation data came in hotter than expected, and Nike warned in its earnings on Thursday that prices will be going higher due to tariffs. Across the U.S. retail and manufacturing distribution chains, inventory has started to be re-ticketed with higher prices, by between 8%-15%, according to ITS Logistics, including for apparel and consumer product goods. The footwear industry says it expects prices to rise by between 6% and 10%. It’s not just higher prices but less inventory With current concerns about trade uncertainty and consumer softness, retailers and manufacturing clients are managing inventory by shrinking SKU counts and importing fewer SKUs they are keeping. The Bureau of Economic Analysis reported that gross domestic product shrank by 0.5% in the first quarter of 2025. “The overall inventory footprint is smaller,” said Martin. “You are looking at three months of inventory on hand now versus six.” Supply chain data from the warehouse sector and the growing number of empty shipping containers at ports are pointing to a more mild peak season (the summer buildup of inventory for the back-to-school and holiday shopping periods). Warehouse inventory levels are down 6% month over month, according to the Logistics Managers’ Index. Comparing readings from the first half of June to later in the month, growth in inventories started to slow down, which suggests that an increase in early June was temporary, according to Zachary Rogers, associate professor of supply chain management at Colorado State University. “Because of how long it takes inventories to move through systems, we haven’t seen any big shifts in transportation yet,” said Rogers. “Warehouse capacity did move from mild contraction to mild expansion.” The data for the full month of June is not in yet, but Rogers said it is highly unlikely the results would change in any meaningful way. “We’re far enough along that we basically know where they’ll end up,” he said.
JDHillFan Posted 6 hours ago Posted 6 hours ago 13 minutes ago, Trump_is_Mentally_fit said: Higher prices and less inventory https://www.cnbc.com/2025/06/27/deep-inside-economy-more-sticker-prices-start-to-go-up-due-to-tariffs.html The latest inflation data came in hotter than expected, and Nike warned in its earnings on Thursday that prices will be going higher due to tariffs. Across the U.S. retail and manufacturing distribution chains, inventory has started to be re-ticketed with higher prices, by between 8%-15%, according to ITS Logistics, including for apparel and consumer product goods. The footwear industry says it expects prices to rise by between 6% and 10%. It’s not just higher prices but less inventory With current concerns about trade uncertainty and consumer softness, retailers and manufacturing clients are managing inventory by shrinking SKU counts and importing fewer SKUs they are keeping. The Bureau of Economic Analysis reported that gross domestic product shrank by 0.5% in the first quarter of 2025. “The overall inventory footprint is smaller,” said Martin. “You are looking at three months of inventory on hand now versus six.” Supply chain data from the warehouse sector and the growing number of empty shipping containers at ports are pointing to a more mild peak season (the summer buildup of inventory for the back-to-school and holiday shopping periods). Warehouse inventory levels are down 6% month over month, according to the Logistics Managers’ Index. Comparing readings from the first half of June to later in the month, growth in inventories started to slow down, which suggests that an increase in early June was temporary, according to Zachary Rogers, associate professor of supply chain management at Colorado State University. “Because of how long it takes inventories to move through systems, we haven’t seen any big shifts in transportation yet,” said Rogers. “Warehouse capacity did move from mild contraction to mild expansion.” The data for the full month of June is not in yet, but Rogers said it is highly unlikely the results would change in any meaningful way. “We’re far enough along that we basically know where they’ll end up,” he said. Is stagflation still viewed as the BEST case scenario? Seems like you made that up. 1
Trump_is_Mentally_fit Posted 6 hours ago Author Posted 6 hours ago 15 minutes ago, JDHillFan said: Is stagflation still viewed as the BEST case scenario? Seems like you made that up. I posted the link originally. Come on, man
JDHillFan Posted 5 hours ago Posted 5 hours ago 20 minutes ago, Trump_is_Mentally_fit said: I posted the link originally. Come on, man Thank you. I went back to the original post and the link you provided. Would you be willing to do the same and show me where it discusses stagflation as a BEST case scenario? I couldn’t find anything even remotely resembling the claim. Seems like you made it up.
Trump_is_Mentally_fit Posted 4 hours ago Author Posted 4 hours ago 53 minutes ago, JDHillFan said: Thank you. I went back to the original post and the link you provided. Would you be willing to do the same and show me where it discusses stagflation as a BEST case scenario? I couldn’t find anything even remotely resembling the claim. Seems like you made it up. I'll show you if you apologize for saying I made it up.
JDHillFan Posted 4 hours ago Posted 4 hours ago 10 minutes ago, Trump_is_Mentally_fit said: I'll show you if you apologize for saying I made it up. I promise to apologize if you are able to come through. In your honor I will also change my phone background to a picture of President Brandon for the rest of today 1
ScotSHO Posted 4 hours ago Posted 4 hours ago 19 minutes ago, JDHillFan said: I promise to apologize if you are able to come through. In your honor I will also change my phone background to a picture of President Brandon for the rest of today Odd choice for a background, but go ahead: 1
Trump_is_Mentally_fit Posted 3 hours ago Author Posted 3 hours ago 1 hour ago, JDHillFan said: I promise to apologize if you are able to come through. In your honor I will also change my phone background to a picture of President Brandon for the rest of today Fair enough, it's in April, not original link, I edited the post after On 4/7/2025 at 11:12 AM, Trump_is_Mentally_fit said: What a mess, Trump is just the stupidest fool there is Stagflation
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