
Know The Difference Minute
627 episodes — Page 1 of 13
Ep 627Who wants a Nothing Burger?
Nobody was expecting the Fed to change rates, so they met expectations.
Ep 626The End Of Negative Rates
Japan just ended a nearly two-decade term of negative rates. Are negative rates the carrot or the stick?
Ep 625Are consumers pausing?
New retail figures for February arrived this morning. Up a seasonally adjusted 0.6%, but under by most estimates.
Ep 624When cars tattle on YOU.
Big piece in the New York Times regarding how our cars are reporting bad driving to insurance companies.
Ep 623Consumer prices....still an issue
The very slim chance of a rate cut next week disappeared this morning when a fresh Consumer Price Index arrived
Ep 622Target targets Amazon and Walmart.
Target announced a paid membership program along the lines of Amazon Prime and Walmart Plus.
Ep 621Credit scores heading down
Credit scores for American consumers are down for the first time in a decade. Don’t be surprised.
Ep 620Trust in AI is dropping
A Gallup study revealed 79% of Americans don't trust companies to use AI responsibly.
Ep 619Wendy's tough week
Think Wendy’s surge pricing meltdown will be covered in business school some day?
Ep 618Diversification a smoother ride?
You didn't know then what you know now. Hindsight tells us what played out well, but foresight is what's needed when it comes to investing.
Ep 617Nvidia crushes it
Plenty of jitters leading up to Nvidia’s earnings report. Was the Genie out of the bottle?
Ep 616Cars. Cheaper and not selling.
The average price of a new vehicle was just over $47,000 last month, down 2.6% from December. Meanwhile, 2.6 million are sitting on lots.
Ep 615Walmart's $2 billion TV purchase
Walmart is going to acquire Vizio for $2.3 billion. It’s a tie-up that will combine America’s largest retailer with a network of smart TV’s.
Ep 614Consumers paused in January
Some major companies in the S&P 500 have said it’s becoming increasingly clear that Americans are under stress, which could cause consumers to eventually curb their spending.
Ep 613The $2 billion typo
One extra zero in an earnings statement caused a $2 billion swing.
Ep 612Inflation won't go away
On the way to a soft landing, inflation was supposed to be heading south. Today’s CPI report had other ideas.
Ep 611Millennials and Gen Z wealth skyrockets
Financial assets were the big driver, growing over 50% as they invested in equities and mutual funds. With longer time horizons, they tended to pick riskier investments.
Ep 610ESPN/Fox/Warner SUPER sports streamer
Coming this fall. 15 different networks with the 4 major professional sports leagues including the NBA, MLB and NHL. Also in: WNBA, NASCAR, NCAA and FIFA World Cup. Networks confirmed include ESPN, ESPN+, ESPN2, ESPNU, SEC, ACC, ABC, Fox, FS1, FS2, Big Ten, TNT, TBS and truTV.
Ep 609Proceed with caution
The Fed will approach the question of when to reduce interest rates carefully, says Chairman Powell. When will enough be enough?
Ep 608Using a borrowed streaming password?
Producing content is expensive. Is borrowing a login content stealing? These streamers think so.
Ep 607The high cost of developing AI
Developing AI is expensive. To pay for it, Google spent $2.1 billion on severance last year laying off more than 12,000. And just this month, its already spent $700 million on employee severance.
Ep 606The $400,000 a year job at Walmart
After base, bonuses, and stock awards, some Walmart Superstore managers can make over $400,000.
Ep 605Soft landing?
It’s clear economist's consensus whiffed on this one. Predictions were in the 2% range but instead, came it at 3.3%. Off from Q3’s 4.9% but still another sign that the widely predicted recession was sitting this one out while the American consumer is not.
Ep 604Is this Taylor Swift's fault?
Delinquency rates on credit cards have climbed 3 straight years. After the friendship bracelets are put away, the credit card statements start showing up.
Ep 603The MOTHER of all data breaches
If there’s any good news, this is already leaked data. Unfortunately, it’s all rolled up into one big dataset and sitting on the dark web. For sale.
Ep 602Fears versus Reality
Historically, corrections become bear markets when fears become reality.
Ep 601Analysis Paralysis
Investors need to embrace the fact that every decision about the future requires a leap of faith.
Ep 600Cyclical and predictable?
Next time some mentions a market cycle or economic cycle, ask them what’s so cyclical about it.
Ep 599The Powell Pause
The Fed has been the arsonist and the firefighter. They were too slow to react to high inflation and then they reacted by hiking rates with reckless abandon.
Ep 598China. The comeback kid?
In the third quarter, China's gross domestic product grew at a 5.3% annualized pace. Consumption was a big driver of growth while the property sector is still struggling.
Ep 597Multi-speed world
A roving recession that hasn’t affected the consumer, yet, could turn into a stumbling recovery for everyone else.
Ep 596Debt Fatigue?
The US government has issued $33 trillion in debt. So who owns all of it?
Ep 595Unprecedented AND Bad?
The word “unprecedented” has been used a lot over the last few years. I do not think it means what you think it means.
Ep 594Shutdown Averted Or Deferred?
Was there a major breakthrough of bipartisanship? It seems like nobody can agree on where to start the cleanup.
Ep 593Macroeconomic Fog
GDP revised. Yes, they’re still trying to figure out how much output the economy produced. And they’ll be doing that for decades to come.
Ep 592Nowhere to hide
Aren’t bonds supposed to provide support to falling stocks? That’s how things seemed to work during the two decades before COVID.
Ep 591Shutdown Countdown
A shutdown delays rather than cancels spending. In fact, a shutdown only affects up to 27% of total federal spending.
Ep 590Higher for longer?
The Federal Open Market Committee won’t tell you what they will do because they don’t even know
Ep 589Crude Reality
Most consumers don’t care about oil prices. They care about gasoline prices.
Ep 588DC, we have a debt problem.
The federal government has spent $5.5 trillion since October 2022 and it has only collected $4 trillion. That’s not a sustainable path
Ep 587The Beyonce Bounce and Swift Surge
Revised down from 0.7% to 0.5%. Not bad, but not as good as originally reported.
Ep 586Inflation is personal
Inflation is heading the right way, but August was a hopefully temporary step backwards.
Ep 585Trade protection isn't globalization
Trade is, and always was, political, it’s just becoming more so.
Ep 584Hard data vs. soft data
Don’t be fooled by the false precision of hard data. The fact is, it’s all squishy.
Ep 583Is September a bad month for stocks?
Monthly averages can be driven by wild moves that have nothing to do with what month it is.
Ep 582The Friday jobs fairy tale
If you hear economists use the phrase, “It was a Goldilocks report,” please remember Baby Bear and that Goldilocks was a criminal.
Ep 581The Feast before the Famine?
The swing from spending on services to goods during COVID and then back towards services may be petering out.
Ep 580Is there any truth to the “bad news is good news” meme?
The good news is that the Fed might feel like it can stop pumping the brakes on the economy.
Ep 579Job hopping? That's so 2022.
People seem to be more skittish about just up and quitting. They’re holding onto jobs a bit more tightly than a year ago.
Ep 578Death, taxes, and losing your shirt
Unlike paying taxes where there is a deadline, the economy does not obey the clock.