Month: June 2023
The Friday File: By scanning publicly available websites, the most popular language on the Internet is English with 55.6% of domains using it. Russian is the second most popular language at 5%, followed by Spanish at 4.9%, German at 4.3%,…
Read MoreNew-lease asking rent growth is plummeting! After rising 14.5% Y-o-Y through last May, new-lease rent increases rose just 2% in 5/23 compared to 5/22, and may well turn negative, something that since the Housing Bust only happened during the first…
Read MoreIn a surprise to nobody, the Fed, after raising rates at 10 consecutive meetings over 15 months, left rates unchanged. However, today’s action was hardly benign. Powell elegantly kept the committee united around tightening policy without raising rates. By signaling…
Read MoreThe Y-o-Y percent change in cardboard box demand as measured by the three-month moving average (which is used to reduce monthly volatility) is down 8.3%. This is the largest decline since the Great Recession when demand fell 12%. The last…
Read MoreWhile last week’s first-time unemployment claims were at their highest level since the week ending 10/30/21, the rise in continuing claims is more concerning. Currently, 19 states show a 25% Y-o-Y increase in continuing claims, the highest percentage outside a…
Read MoreThe Friday File: Last month, the SEC’s whistleblower program paid out a gargantuan award of $229 million to one recipient. This blew away the previous record of a $114 million award to an individual in 2020. This most recent award…
Read MoreThe largest firm in the U.S. by revenue is, for the 11th year in a row, Walmart, with sales of $611 billion. In second is Amazon at $514 billion, followed by ExxonMobile at $414 billion, and Apple at $394 billion.…
Read MoreIn 2019, venture capitalists raised $3.3 billion from investors for investment in various stage private crypto firms. In 2020, the amount grew to $5.5 billion, to $14.4 billion in 2021, and $21.6 billion in 2022. So far this year, the…
Read MoreMay payrolls grew by a strong 339,000, March and April employment was revised up by 93,000, and wage growth remained strong at 4.3%, largely unchanged since 1/23. But the unemployment rate ticked up to 3.7%, its highest rate since 10/22,…
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