Burning Money - $4+ Trillion USD So Far

petros

The Central Scrutinizer
Nov 21, 2008
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What is "burning money?"

For the purposes of macroeconomics, burning money is equivalent to removing the money from circulation, and locking it away forever; the salient feature is that no one may ever use the money again. Burning money shrinks the money supply, and is therefore a special case of contractionary monetary policy that can be implemented by anyone. In the usual case, the central bank withdraws money from circulation by selling government bonds or foreign currency. The difference with money burning is that the central bank does not have to exchange any assets of value for the money burnt. Money burning is thus equivalent to gifting the money back to the central bank (or other money issuing authority). If the economy is at full employment equilibrium, shrinking the money supply causes deflation (or decreases the rate of inflation), increasing the real value of the money left in circulation.

US stock market loses $4 trillion in value as Trump plows ahead on tariffs​

By Lewis Krauskopf and Saqib Iqbal Ahmed
March 10, 20255:10 PM CSTUpdated 4 hours ago
  • S&P 500 down over 8% from Feb 19 all-time high
  • Nasdaq confirmed 10% correction from its Dec peak last week
  • S&P 500 P/E moderates but still high vs historical average
  • Delta Air Lines cuts forecast on growing economic uncertainty
  • Tesla loses more than $125 bln in value in one day
NEW YORK, March 10 (Reuters) - President Donald Trump’s tariffs have spooked investors, with fears of an economic downturn driving a stock market sell-off that has wiped out $4 trillion from the S&P 500’s peak last month, when Wall Street was cheering much of Trump's agenda.

A barrage of new Trump policies has increased uncertainty for businesses, consumers and investors, notably back-and-forth tariff moves against major trading partners like Canada, Mexico and China.

"We've seen clearly a big sentiment shift," said Ayako Yoshioka, senior investment strategist at Wealth Enhancement. "A lot of what has worked is not working now."

The stock market selloff deepened on Monday. The benchmark S&P 500 (.SPX), opens new tab fell 2.7%, its biggest daily drop of the year. The Nasdaq Composite (.IXIC), opens new tab slid 4%, its largest one-day decline since September 2022.

The S&P 500 on Monday closed down 8.6% from its February 19 record high, shedding over $4 trillion in market value since then and nearing a 10% decline that would represent a correction for the index. The tech-heavy Nasdaq ended Thursday down more than 10% from its December high.

 

bob the dog

Council Member
Aug 14, 2020
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Any headwind theses days is magnified x 10 with algorithms taking the opportunity to drive the market down. Remember they are making money as they do so.

This appears to be a major gale in the making though and will hurt good companies that could go to zero. Small guy will take the hit.
 

petros

The Central Scrutinizer
Nov 21, 2008
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Any headwind theses days is magnified x 10 with algorithms taking the opportunity to drive the market down. Remember they are making money as they do so.

This appears to be a major gale in the making though and will hurt good companies that could go to zero. Small guy will take the hit.
Right now its the only way to tackle inflation. Its going to hurt in the short term. Im a rip the bandaid off in one pull kind of person.
 
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petros

The Central Scrutinizer
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How can you benefit? When toilet paper is on sale for 1/2 price do you buy one pack or two? Stocks are no different, wait until 1/2 and buy when your dollar has more power.
 

bob the dog

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Aug 14, 2020
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Right now its the only way to tackle inflation. Its going to hurt in the short term. Im a rip the bandaid off in one pull kind of person.
Any chance they hold the line on the public sector raises that are tied to inflation coming April 1 ?

Money was originally a tool designed to facilitate trade and now it is something we hoard to ourselves. Inflation is just a fancy term they thought up that describes nothing imo
 

petros

The Central Scrutinizer
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As always blame Trump.

Globalism died Feb 24 2022 when Putin invaded Ukraine from the north this time.

It was October 8 2023 (the day after the Holocaustages) that gold did a U Turn and crypto went nuts. Gold is still a snorting bull.

July of 2024 looming executive orders imposing sanctions on Russia triggered Xi in China to start stockpiling.


By October 2024 the IMF was pointing to the big cracks forming.


Here we are today with gold up $1000 in a year to $3100 with all kinds of bubbles popping, markets plumetting and everyone shitting bricks ignorant of WW3 ramping up to the big bang.

Where was Trump in Feb of 2022? The focus of a witch hunt.
 

petros

The Central Scrutinizer
Nov 21, 2008
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Yet banks still reporting record earnings.
TD Bank:
The bank's net income fell by 1% to $2.79 billion in the three months ending January 31, with profit from its U.S. arm tumbling 61% to $342 million. This was attributed to restructuring its balance sheet and addressing anti-money laundering issues.

Scotiabank:
Scotiabank's profit also slumped in the fourth quarter, with the bank setting aside almost $1.3 billion to cover potentially bad loans.

Bank of Montreal (BMO):
BMO has been an underperformer, facing weak revenue growth, poor credit performance, and narrowing net interest margins.

Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce (CIBC):
CIBC's adjusted expense growth was faster than expected in the last quarter.

Other Factors:
Loan-Loss Provisions: Banks are setting aside more money to cover potential bad loans, impacting their profits.

US Market Challenges: Canadian banks with a strong presence in the US, like TD and BMO, have faced challenges in the competitive US banking market.

Mortgage Market: With more than half of Canadian mortgages renewing in 2025 and 2026, the changing landscape could thrust the country's banking sector into a mortgage war.

Interest Rate Differentials (IRDs): Falling interest rates can trigger break penalties for borrowers, calculated using "interest rate differentials" (IRDs), which can be costly for consumers.

Tariffs: Big bank stocks are falling amid tariff chaos, with some analysts calling the tariffs "unconditionally bad" for US banks.