Originally Posted by
DakotaRog
Yeah, but #4 & 5 were in place already last summer and fall and steel price was fairly stable. Non-ferrous is down around here (copper just started going down recently) but much less of a hit, (ok aluminum down about 35% since early 2018 or so). I know that non-ferrous and steel don't line up the same but some of the same factors should be in play. Supposedly the economy is roaring so you'd think demand within the country would be up. Maybe it just shows how much of USA scrap was heading to Chicom land on a regular basis for the last decade or so...
It's a hard call on 4 & 5 from my perspective. I'm mostly going by what i see here in my own little world. It might not reflect the bigger picture.
Gasoline was steady at 3.00 $ / gal. all through the summer & fall last year. It went to 3.00 $ this spring and then dropped to 2.80$ a couple of weeks later. It seems to be stable now.
JMHO, but i think we're still in payback mode. My guess is that total private & business indebtedness across the nation is slooowly shrinking. That should shrink the money supply and make for a stronger dollar ?
It's a hard call on the economy from this little guy's perspective. We had a rough winter and a slow spring. People are still scrounging for money here. It should have picked up by now. I'm hopeful that things will pick up within the next few weeks.
To use a parallel ... think of the farmer that muddled through the winter, paid out all spring to get his fields planted, and then is waiting for his crop to come in. Poor guy is probably down to his last dollar ?
Totally agree on China. They say that the materials we all work to recycle are being used as feedstock for manufacturing. If most of our manufacturing in the states has gone east ... then there's little demand here at home ?
These trade barriers & tarrifs remind me of the old joke where all of the different parts of the body are arguing about who's the boss.
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