Medical segregation in its early phases.
"You dirty unvaxxed…"
"It's for your safety"
Instead of Nuremberg Laws we can call them theKStreet Laws
Medical segregation in its early phases.
"You dirty unvaxxed…"
"It's for your safety"
Instead of Nuremberg Laws we can call them theKStreet Laws
>When did US Military sell out to international bankers? Do you know how long ago?
107 years ago with the creation of the FED.
Don't kid yourself into thinking they didn't know what was going on at the time.
They all did.
And you were either on board or you got sunk on the titanic (astor etc.) or some other similar fate.
Lessons learned, that's WHY we are all here, regardless of color creed religion.
https://www.schwab.com/resource-center/insights/content/schwab-market-update
JEROME POWELL – TRUMPS CHOICE makin' it happen.
Schwab Market Update
Stocks Mixed as Markets Digest Data and Fed Decision
Listen to the latest audio Schwab Market Update. Or listen and subscribe for free to the end-of-day Schwab Market Update podcast:
U.S. stocks are mixed in early action amid another session of heavy data and as the markets continue to digest yesterday's unchanged monetary policy decision from the Fed. The first look at Q2 GDP showed growth came in noticeably below forecasts and jobless claims were north of expectations. Facebook topped earnings estimates but warned of a significant deceleration in revenue growth, and Comcast topped the Street's expectations. Treasuries are dipping after reversing higher yesterday following the Fed's decision, with yields nudging higher. The U.S. dollar is seeing some pressure, while gold and crude oil prices are gaining ground. Asia finished broadly higher amid a choppy week, while Europe is rebounding for a second session.
As of 9:06 a.m. ET, the September S&P 500 Index future is 11 points above fair value, the DJIA future is 173 points above fair value, and the Nasdaq 100 Index future is 13 points south of fair value. WTI crude oil is increasing $0.58 to $72.97 per barrel and Brent crude oil is rising $0.41 to $74.28 per barrel. The gold spot price is trading $24.80 higher to $1,824.50 per ounce. Elsewhere, the Dollar Index—a comparison of the U.S. dollar to six major world currencies—is falling 0.4% to 91.98.
Facebook Inc. (FB $373) reported Q2 earnings-per-share (EPS) of $3.61, topping the $3.04 FactSet estimate, with revenues rising 56.0% year-over-year (y/y) to $29.1 billion, exceeding the Street's forecast of $27.9 billion. The company's daily and monthly active users both rose 7.0% y/y, mostly in line with projections. FB said it saw advertising revenue growth that was driven by a 47.0% y/y increase in the average price per ad and a 6.0% gain in the number of ads delivered. The company said it expects advertising revenue growth will be driven primarily by y/y advertising price increases during the rest of 2021, but it forecasts y/y revenue growth rates to "decelerate significantly" on a sequential basis as it laps periods of increasingly strong growth. FB said on a two-year basis it expects revenue growth to decelerate modestly in the second half of the year compared to the Q2 growth rate.
Comcast Corporation (CMCSA $58) posted adjusted Q2 EPS of $0.84, above the projected $0.66, as revenues grew 20.4% y/y to $28.6 billion, exceeding the forecasted $27.2 billion. The company said it continued the great start to the year with "exceptional" performance at its cable unit that saw the best broadband and total customer net additions on record for a second quarter and the most wireless net additions since the launch of Xfinity Mobile in 2017. CMCSA added that its NBCUniversal unit saw increased operating earnings, fueled by the recovery at Theme Parks.
Amid the busiest week for earnings season, Schwab's Chief Investment Strategist Liz Ann Sonders delivers her latest article, One Step Closer … to Peak Earnings Growth?. She points out that while earnings have already surprised to the upside in the second quarter, the magnitude of strength has been expected. Looking ahead, Liz Ann notes, earnings growth rates will likely continue to cool, as comparisons to the prior year inevitably become more difficult. She adds that as we have continued to point out, investors should focus not just on the earnings growth rate; but also what companies are saying with respect to inflationary pressures, profit margins, and forward guidance.