The housing-market boom of 2021 is about to lead to a great American commercial-building boom as more shopping centers, doctor's offices, and supply stores go up across the country — providing a big boost for the US economy, says Neil Dutta.
On a technical level, commercial real estate has the chance to bounce back in a big way because it never really took off before the pandemic.
The long-pent-up need for more commercial buildings is going to reach a tipping point and lead to a massive boom. businessinsider.com/housing-market…
The most promising case for a CRE boom is easy to see: Just look at how many new homes are being built around your neighborhood. CRE construction tends to follow residential building.
These new households will require new businesses: grocery stores, clothing retailers, barbershops, and beauty salons. As cities, suburbs, and towns grow, they will need the infrastructure to support expanding populations.
We're already seeing the first signs of the coming CRE boom. One is that the American Institute of Architects' Architecture Billings Index, which measures nonresidential construction activity, has been expanding for the past 11 months.
So given the higher up-front cost of land and the higher long-term cost of interest, could the commercial-building boom turn out to be a bust? Neil Dutta says probably not.
The crypto boom has created a new class of quasi-celebrities, with those who made early bets on #crypto now hailed as financial prophets and faced with the spoils of sudden wealth.
In the process, some have become targets for opportunistic criminals. ⬇️
Digital crypto scams are common, but experts say not enough attention is paid to physical crimes, like the man who was drugged by his Tinder date to get him to give up his passwords or the schoolboy who was held for ransom after posting about his profits.
These kinds of attacks illustrate a fundamental weak link in cryptocurrency.
For all the complex cryptographic math that underpins the integrity of crypto, if someone with a gun forces you to hand yours over, there's not much you can do about it.
The real reason workers are ditching their employers, said author and @EZPR CEO @edzitron, is because the pandemic provided a vivid demonstration of how little corporations care about their employees.
Inflation is running at 7% right now, the highest level since the early 1980s.
When left unchecked, inflation can create an economically ruinous and socially destabilizing spiral, and most people agree on the need to prevent that.
The Fed really wants you to know that it has all the tools it needs to curb inflation.
And that’s true, technically. But these tools could create a disaster — one that would be even more catastrophic due to the Fed’s own policies over the past 12 years.
Since Nike CEO John Donahoe started, the company’s shares are up 46%, creating more than $75 billion in shareholder wealth. But to some, the success has come at a cost as current and former insiders are worried about an exodus of Nike veterans.👇
On March 15, 2020, Nike closed stores across Western Europe and the United States as the pandemic raged across the globe. The company’s sweeping response included philanthropic donations, continuing to pay retail workers, and more.