Coin shortage: this is the strangest story to come out of the Wuhan flu pandemic. Over at ZeroHedge:
Treasury Secretary Steve Mnuchin urged his Twitter followers on
Tuesday to swap out their spare coins for cash at banks amid a
continuing nationwide coin shortage that appears to be worsening.
If you have extra coins at home, please use them to make
purchases— or deposit them at the bank or exchange them for cash. Help
get coins moving! 🇺🇸
— Steven Mnuchin (@stevenmnuchin1), August 11, 2020
There's currently a shortage of pennies, nickels, dimes, and quarters caused by the coronavirus
pandemic, which led the Federal Reserve to start rationing coins in
June.
Community banks have asked customers to deposit spare change to pump more coins into circulation. Because of the shortage, major retailers have told consumers to pay in cards or exact change.
"Until coin circulation patterns return to normal, it may be more
difficult for retailers and small businesses to accept cash payments,"
the US Mint said in late July. "For millions of Americans, cash is the
only form of payment and cash transactions rely on coins to make
change."
Now, before readers start rummaging through their homes, underneath
sofa cushions, and under car seats for spare coins to help the country
in these challenging times, there are certain coins in circulation that
are worth more in scrap than face value.
Pennies from 1909-1982 are approximately 95% copper and have a metal
value of about $0.0185. In this instance, once could almost double their
money if they took these pennies to a scrapper than the bank. At the link, the complete list of what coins are worth in terms of face value versus
metal value.
And, no, I'm not melting down my pennies.
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Peeved
AOC given one minute to speak at DNC convention. One minute. I assume once she takes the podium, she will talk as long as she wants. It's not as if the organizers are going to physically drag her off the stage.
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NBA = BLM
Updates
August 26, 2020: BLM cancels championship games for today, Wednesday, August 26, 2020, due to new police shooting. Link: https://www.foxnews.com/sports/milwaukee-bucks-boycott-game-5-orlando-magic-shooting-jacob-blake.
Original Post
Anyone watching the NBA games has noted that this league is now the #BlackLivesMatter league. Pretty amazing. I watched a bit of the Toronto Raptors - Philadelphia 76ers game last night: it looked like a "pick-up" game in an empty (and very small) high school gymnasium. For social distancing, players and staff were given assigned (and separated) seats: no one was adhering to social distancing during the game, but "in the bubble" it probably doesn't matter.
No one knows how this will play out, but "branding" is incredibly important. From brandingmag.com:
Branding is important
because not only is it what makes a memorable impression on consumers
but it allows your customers and clients to know what to expect from
your company. It is a way of distinguishing yourself from the
competitors and clarifying what it is you offer that makes you the
better choice.
We know the Apple brand, the Coca-Cola brand, the ATT brand. The question with regard tothe NBA: is the NBA brand changing? It will be interesting to follow the trajectory of the announcers, once they realize they have become nothing more than announcers for a political movement.
To repeat: branding makes a memorable impression on consumers
but it allows your customers and clients to know what to expect from
your company.
I find it fascinating.
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Vaccine Efficacy
Quick: how many viral maladies have "we" eliminated worldwide?
Quick: how effective are modern vaccines?
I've lost interest in the pandemic, but I still occasionally post something about Wuhan flu. This was sent to me by a reader. The quote comes from an Albuquerque, NM, physician who publishes at the national level:
Regarding the risk of death from
CoViD-19 in children, on August 5, 2020,
President Trump said they were “almost
immune.” Both the White House press corps
and Politfact wrote this was a lie, that there
was no evidence to support such a claim.
But there is.
According to official data, on August 5,
2020, 142,164 Americans had died with
death attributed to CoViD-19. Of these, 45
were less than 15 years of age. This
calculates to a childhood risk of death from
CoViD-19 of 0.03 percent, and conversely, a
safety factor for children of 99.97 percent.
No vaccine ever created for any infectious
illness has a protection level as high as
99.97 percent, comparable to the immunity
that children seem to exhibit to CoViD-19.
By the way, there is a scientific reason why children may be less susceptible to getting infected by coronavirus in the first place. And interestingly enough, it relates back to hydroxychloroquine.
I've discussed this earlier.
Other than smallpox, "we" have not eradicated any virus. After years of research and a gazillion dollars we still do not have a vaccine for HIV/AIDs but we do have a "cocktail" to treat. That will be the same outcome for coronavirus.
The "seasonal flu" vaccine is, at best, 45% effective. We are encouraged to get the annual "seasonal flu" shot and still:
The CDC estimates that influenza has resulted in
between 9 million – 45 million illnesses, between 140,000 – 810,000 hospitalizations and between 12,000 – 61,000 deaths annually since 2010.
The coronavirus cocktail: red meat (as in beef) + hydroxychloroquine + doxycycline/azithromycin.
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Market
I wrote all that to say this: I don't think "the market" has factored in the fact that we won't have a meaningful vaccine outcome any time soon. The "bridge" will be treating the disease on an out-patient basis.
Disclaimer: this is not an investment site. Do not make any investment, financial, job, career, travel, or relationship decisions based on what you read here or think you may have read here.
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Still Unexplained
I still find it amazing that retailers have not made more of an effort to protect their property from looting.
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Stock Splits
For reasons not worth mentioning, my daily routine has changed. I haven't watched CNBC in quite some time, but I am now watching selected segments throughout the day. I find it fascinating that there is actually some good commentary. CNBC's "Squawk Box," from 5:00 a.m. to 8:00 a.m. CDT is okay to watch on "mute." The next segment, I don't know what it is called -- oh, here it is -- "Squawk on the Street" is my favorite segment of the day. David Faber is my favorite CNBC host and his banter with a relatively calm Jim Cramer can be quite enlightening. Love him or hate him, Jim Cramer is the Rush Limbaugh of the investing world. Joe Kernan looks bloated, tired, unhealthy compared to when I last saw him, months ago. Of the major presenters, the one I like least: Michael Santoli. Wow, he can talk a market down. LOL.
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TCM
August is "stars under the stars" or something like that. The network features one actor/actress for a 24-hour period. Yesterday, it was Lana Turner. I was quite surprised how much I enjoyed some of the movies.
It appears John Barrymore is today's featured star. I don't know him well. But look at this, wow: at 4:30 p.m. today: Bulldog Drummond Comes Back. My wife and I were introduced to the stage presentation of Bulldog Drummond decades ago (1978) in San Francisco. Wow, those were great times. At age 69 years old, I "measure" my life by different "criteria" for lack of a better word. One way I track my life is the woman with whom I shared my experiences in any give year or decade.
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Reading
I haven't done much for the past two weeks -- correct that, I haven't done any reading of consequence. I did receive my summer issue of The Claremont Review of Books yesterday. A quick look at the essays last night: not impressed.
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NYC
Vacancies hit all-time high, more than double last year's numbers. Something like 1300 apartments are empty. Apparently this is the time of the year families flock back to NYC to rent apartments to send their children to school -- weird phenomenon of which I was unaware -- and apparently that is not happening this year. Short segment on CNBC. I'm sure the story is all over the internet if interested. I'm not.
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Cars
Most interesting business story: auto dealers -- business is booming. This is amazing. Google it. There's a difference between auto manufacturers and auto dealers. The latter is booming, even if the former is not. Check out VROOM -- shares tank on quarterly miss. Wow, the numbers look bad. A reader wrote me yesterday -- perfect timing -- and then this story on CNBC this morning. From the reader yesterday, with editing:
I went to the local Ford dealership earlier today ...
Speaking
with Dave, the salesman who we purchased car from: I asked if the new 2021 F-pickups are in. He said not yet, one more month
Then I asked how much his sales
had fallen this summer.
His
words: March had a good first week, the last three weeks in March, a ghost town. Things starting moving upward in April, slowly. People had looked on-line and
really knew what they were looking at buying; Aprl was an "OK" month.
Dave is about 60 yrs old and has sold bew and used cars for 32 years, both Chevrolets and then went to the Ford garage in town.
He
said that the months of June and July were by
far the best months he had ever had: the most dollars worth of vehicles he has ever sold. He also
indicated that the people had the most cash/checks for a partial payment
of the purchases.
In our same area, motor home/travel trailer/RV dealers have huge "holes"
in their lots as the inventory is simply not there. And up here [in Minnesota] usually September is
the large sales month for folks buying just before they go south for the
winter.
Tonight I
spoke to one of my brothers, also here in Minnesota. He said in northern Minnesota if you want a
ATV, or a side/by/side unit the only inventory left is the very, very
expensive models, no low- or mid-cost units around.
Funny how I got that note from a reader yesterday and then Phil LeBeau reports the same story this morning. Amazing.
What a great blog! What great readers.