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11 votes
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4,000 US Google cafeteria workers quietly unionized during the pandemic
12 votes -
How this Florida town became the sea sponge capital of the world | Big Business
2 votes -
The branch banking model
8 votes -
Klarna has revealed that losses more than tripled in the first half of the year – firm has been hit by a slowdown in consumer spending
8 votes -
The Biden-Harris administration's US student debt relief plan
35 votes -
How Mondragon became the world’s largest co-op
11 votes -
The new US Income-Driven Repayment system could cause some big problems
7 votes -
When it comes to flaunting its defense industry, Stockholm is shy – and it's hurting Swedish companies and handing lucrative contracts to competitors
4 votes -
Rare earths processor Neo Performance Materials has bought exploration rights to mine in Greenland – diversifying supplies of minerals critical for advanced technologies
6 votes -
UK inflation to hit 18.6% next year according to Citi
Archive: https://archive.ph/t0oH2 From the article: UK inflation is on course to hit 18.6 per cent in January — the highest peak in almost half a century — because of soaring wholesale gas prices,...
Archive: https://archive.ph/t0oH2
From the article:
UK inflation is on course to hit 18.6 per cent in January — the highest peak in almost half a century — because of soaring wholesale gas prices, according to a new forecast from Citigroup based on the latest market prices.
The investment bank predicted that the retail energy price cap would be raised to £4,567 in January and then £5,816 in April, compared with the current level of £1,971 a year — shifts it said would lead to inflation “entering the stratosphere”.
[...]
UK and European wholesale natural gas prices are already trading at close to 10 times normal levels and other forecasters have also raised their inflation predictions.
Goldman Sachs and EY said they expected an inflation rate of at least 15 per cent around the start of next year and the Bank of England said this month that inflation would exceed 13 per cent towards the end of the year.
The energy regulator Ofgem will on Friday announce the energy price cap for the period between October and January, which most analysts expect to rise to more than £3,500 for a household with average usage of energy — an increase of 75 per cent on current levels.
12 votes -
Inside the crypto black markets of Argentina
4 votes -
Buy a rural hospital for $100? Investors pick up struggling institutions for pennies
7 votes -
Norway's exports reached a record in July, driven mainly by natural gas prices that have soared – higher fish and metals exports also contributed
4 votes -
Inflation reduction act explained by Hank Green
7 votes -
Why does the IRS need $80 billion? Just look at its cafeteria.
15 votes -
US consumer prices rose 8.5% in July, less than expected as inflation pressures ease a bit
8 votes -
Walmart ponders streaming deal with Paramount, Disney and Comcast
3 votes -
Axios agrees to sell to Cox for $525 million in cash
11 votes -
How prisoners in America got into stocks
14 votes -
Counterfeits, fraud, and theft: Why Silca changed its return policy
8 votes -
US Mega Millions ticket wins $1.34 billion lottery jackpot
13 votes -
US SEC charges eleven people in alleged $300 million crypto Ponzi scheme
10 votes -
Non-profit endowment creation
Hi Friends, I'm in the (very) early stages of creating a financial endowment fund for a small non-profit community organization I help out with. I feel they're a good fit for such an investment...
Hi Friends,
I'm in the (very) early stages of creating a financial endowment fund for a small non-profit community organization I help out with. I feel they're a good fit for such an investment vehicle: their current revenue stream fluctuates a bit and many of their events rely heavily on attendance fees for funding, which is unrealistic when they attempt to cater to lower-income demographics. However, they have a relatively wealthy patronage that tends to remain involved for years or decades, and I believe they have the institutional stability to operate more complex financial instruments.
I pitched the idea of an endowment at a high level to the Chairwoman last week, and the Board is interested in moving forward. We haven't decided how exactly we want to structure the endowment yet: restricted endowment, quasi-endowment, etc. We also haven't determined exactly how much money we should fundraise for a principal investment, what our portfolio spread should look like, and how much of the annual interest we can afford to spend. (I have estimates, but they're not final.) I'm particularly interested in resources that can help the institution plan for inevitable economic downturns.
Has anyone here done this kind of work before? If so, would you be willing to chat about some of the nuances of organizing it, and/or do you have recommendations on reading material to help with the creation and maintenance of such a fund? We plan to receive consultations from an accountant and a lawyer, but I don't have much formal background in finance and would welcome any experience, advice, warnings, or external resources Tildesians can offer.
Thanks,
Atvelonis10 votes -
Denmark's decade-long experiment with negative rates seen ending soon – central bank raised its key interest rate
5 votes -
Limits to economic growth
6 votes -
How does one "deal" with a recession?
From the position of an individual. Are there any financial strategies? Lifestyle choices? Whatever helps stay on top as much as possible. Usually I just let it wash over because I have no idea.
22 votes -
United States: An uneasy feeling
7 votes -
Monetary policy, inflation outlook, and recession probabilities
3 votes -
Lego is to cease all operations in Russia indefinitely after pausing deliveries to its eighty-one stores in the country in March
13 votes -
Why Sri Lanka is having an economic crisis
5 votes -
How the YouTube creator economy works
8 votes -
Euro reaches parity with dollar
I didn't find any great links so made this a self post. Here are some just from Google but they mainly just say what's on the tin:...
I didn't find any great links so made this a self post. Here are some just from Google but they mainly just say what's on the tin:
https://www.cnn.com/2022/07/11/investing/euro-dollar-parity/index.html
As of 5:00 pm Eastern on July 11th 2022, if you check the exchange rate, the dollar is now 1:1 with the Euro.
In terms of effects, it seems complicated. Europe has a decently export heavy economy, unlike the US (for which only 10% of its GDP comes from manufacturing), so a weak Euro will help that.
However, it will make all imports more expensive. This is another supply shock, as most of continental Europe already faces heavy issues with regards to energy given the sanctions on Russia, one of the primary energy providers.
So it will certainly make domestic inflation worse (note: domestic inflation and the value of the currency on FX are different things - although they can mutually affect each other). If nothing else, the LNG Europe is buying from the US will be more expensive. The ECB has struggled to raise interest rates to fight inflation given Spain and Italy's high debt levels, and this won't help.
Winter could potentially be very, very bad.
For the US, a strong dollar is probably fine. The US is not a heavy export country, and the dollar surge helps cement reserve currency status from which the US gets a number of benefits. A slowdown in exports will also help tamper inflation.
The pound for the most part has tracked with the Euro, brexit or not.
17 votes -
Right-wing think tank Family Research Council, a staunch opponent of abortion and LGBTQ rights, joins growing list of activist groups seeking church status to shield themselves from financial scrutiny
6 votes -
Klarna has seen its value slashed by 85% to less than $7bn in its latest round of fundraising
6 votes -
The alchemy of deposits
9 votes -
Tax excess margins
2 votes -
With no fuel and no cash, Sri Lanka grinds to a halt
10 votes -
FTC sues Walmart for facilitating money transfer fraud that fleeced US customers out of hundreds of millions
9 votes -
As Europe searches the world for oil to replace Russian barrels, the Johan Sverdrup oilfield in the North Sea is helping plug the gap
4 votes -
Russia defaults on foreign debt for first time since 1918
15 votes -
Is the era of cheap money over?
6 votes -
$100 million worth of crypto has been stolen in another major hack
9 votes -
Nonprofit boards are weird
4 votes -
Immigration shortfall may be a headwind for labor supply
5 votes -
Untangling persistent versus transitory shocks to inflation
3 votes -
The problem with NFTs
8 votes -
The stock market kinda wants a recession
10 votes -
Danish toy company Lego said it plans to invest more than $1 billion over ten years – new factory in the US and to enlarge an existing factory in Mexico
8 votes -
Coinbase to lay off 18% of staff (1,110 people) because the company grew too quickly and a potential recession "could lead to another crypto winter"
17 votes