Can someone explain this to me?

Can someone who understands economics explain why the US markets are doing so well atm while the Biritsh markets are in free fall? In other words, why is economy responding so well to Trump but so badly to Brexit? Both were supposed to be unexpected factors set for economic uncertainty

jews
also Taiga is the best girl

Trump isn't technically in power yet.

The markets are currently treating Trump like an ordinary Republican - low taxes, less regulations, etc.

If, after January 20, Trump goes full-populist (eg. China breaks relations over Taiwan or starts a trade war, Trump institutes the 35% tariff on imports, Trump pushes for universal healthcare instead of RandPaulCare as Obamacare's successor, etc.), the economy will likely shit itself.

USA has leverage over its local trading partners, if USA wanted to it could crash the Mexican economy overnight. UK doesn't have enough economic power to fuck the EU and the EU is instead going to try to fuck UK to punish them for fucking up their scheme.

Stop using stock market numbers within 3 months as a sign on how things are going, you're starting to sound like cnn
Brexit haven't started
Trump has 0 policies in effect

I doubt Mexico makes that much of a dent. The Dow keeps breaking records highs

Not just ordinary republican, he wants to place import tariffs on outsource business. This mean local companies will get boost in businesses. Things like oil/gas/coal will see boosts.

UK being a puss about Brexit and going "Maybe, maybe not!" about it is hurting it. Coupled with Obama threatening economic action against the UK, coupled with the EU doing the same, people are very worried.

America is big enough to throw around it's weight and get away with it. If we start to back the UK with an Anglosphere market to replace the EU, people will invest in both of us and we'll boom.

The US is on a bubble right now, like it was in 2006/2007.

trump leads to libertarianism, brexit's bait was about focalizing socialism to nation

playing cheese on reaction is being bad at it

good economic analysis be ahead of happenings because you're reading all the signaling about they actually are pointing to go and you understand what that leads

it's not sorcery

>good economic analysis be ahead of happenings because you're reading all the signaling about they actually are pointing to go and you understand what that leads
Where does one learn how to do this? Is it an inbuilt analytical sense?

Because there's still uncertainty surrounding when/if Britain will exit, meanwhile Trump becoming president is pretty much guaranteed.
Britain didn't exit the EU yet either

Its not sorcery

this

Referendum was half a year ago and is still not even really initiated...

then it takes atleast another 2 years to really LEVE the EU etcetc...

Trump going from candidate the established laught about,to republican candidate to elected president full circle in not even half the time...

Wealthy people have been putting more of their money in the use stock markets, inflating prices. They will pull back eventually and prices will fall.

Short answer: Theresa May is a cunt.

Trump is aggressively promoting internal investment and mercantilist policies. This makes it clear that investing in U.S. based businesses is now a good move, as the incoming administration will push policies which benefit U.S. based businesses. May, on the other hand, is a wishy washy establishment politician who hasn't moved to actually enact Brexit. This is causing additional uncertainty in british markets, as a lack of clear direction leaves people without any insight as to how they should invest.

Markets are heavily driven by expectations. If you don't work to shape people's expectations, the way Trump does, then you create an atmosphere of uncertainty. May needs to man-up and invoke article 50. Then she needs to sit the Continentals (Merkel, Juncker, etc.) down and explain to them that if they don;t want a trade war with Britain, then they need to cut a deal now. Sadly, little miss "Thatcher lite" litterally doesn't have the balls to do that.

Trump is actually happening, Brexit was just v a p o r w a r e

>good economic analysis be ahead of happenings because you're reading all the signaling about they actually are pointing to go and you understand what that leads
And most of the number changes are coming from the same bunch that previously got btfo by election results
So what's your point

kek says trump will fix the markets

More complex issues are involved in the markets. Brexit may eventually lead to a growth or fall in UK markets depending on how trade is affected. Also, if the EU had stranglehold effects on the UK economy it may rebound.

In the US, we are in the midst of postponing dealing with the housing crisis. Tarp and everything Obama did tried to hide the damage done, kind of like taking a houses structural support columns in order to repair the ugly termite damage on the outside. We will have to see though how it all pans out. Eventually the US will have to pay the price for printing money for nothing

oh my fuck

DIGITS BE UPON HIM

The UK has no tradeable assets. Its just a small shitty island that has a lot of rain. Its the equivalent of an isolated Washington state.

Of course its economy is in a free fall, the empire is dead nigger.

>kek shows no mercy towards England

REEEEEEEE

>file name
the queen is btfo this month

Lol no. the Britbong economy is the fastest growing western one

Kek never responds to Check Em's. Also the Queen is a horrible hag. Hope she dies.

well, being intp might push you to learn about this naturally by trial and error, but you can force yourself to learn economics
there's nothing to it, you just need a working brain and basics to think economics, my background is not even STEM

it's not that complicated, good analysts doesn't make extraordinary claims, they just point the obvious everyone else refueses to see

economics nowadays is like heliocentrism to modern astronomy or bleeding out to medicine, their foundations are kek praises

understanding how the system works, what incentives are, what is inflation, how they're fighting recesion and how we got into the 2007 crisis is something kids can manage, really

you just have to learn few technical stuff you had no idea nor image about

those burger dudes at the 1929s that studied, worked hard, made a family and tried their best everyday, trying to make a healthy and non degenerate family, lost everything in an instant because of not being aware of the big picture they were living in

kek won't bring mercy for economic iliterates

...

Interesting take on it.
>well, being intp might push you to learn about this naturally by trial and error
ENFP, but regardless, where do you recommend I start? Any particular reading materials to go through or things to look at it or is it just a matter of watching stock market trends long enough?

This is probably the best answer here for mentioning that markets are reliant on expectations.

There isn't a lot of positive expectations for Brexit. It now looks increasingly likely that a "hard Brexit" will happen, meaning that the UK will lose free access to the EU. That's just bad, and there's no real counteracting economic good.

The election of Trump was different. Wall Street is talking about "The Three Pillars of Trump," which are tax reform, regulatory reform, and infrastructure spending. US markets exploded upward initially on the idea that these changes would pass easily and be just like what Trump said they would be. S&P 500 earnings are now expected to grow at ~15%/year for the next 3 years. That's pretty amazing.

US markets have paused since early December as the spotlight has turned to Trump's trade rhetoric and reservations have grown about his ability to pass his proposals as originally intended.

Read books,

Stop listening to ESL

ESL?

'freefall'
I think you mean the pound is down 20% atm.
There's not been much to any downsides for the every day person yet. Inflation is still good. Just lots of middle class people who holiday 5 times a year to their Spanish villa complaining about the exchange rate

Obama is gone though, how is this relevant to investors?

He's out, soon. He still has enough power to fuck shit up, like ending Wet foot, Dry foot, so until he's fully out, he's still a bit of a threat.

Plus, it's the presumption of a threat from such a power that hit them, now it's just lingering. Once Trump is in, and hopefully encourages strong trade with the UK, we'll see it turn around and boom in profits for both of us.

Open a newspaper

How's ending 3rd world migration from a commie shithole a bad thing lel

Cubans vote red, they know communism is shit because they lived it.
.

HERE WE GO BOYS

Those digits...

53% of them voted red mostly oldfags

Trump's policies and the current legislative environment mean that oil prices are about to tank, resulting in lower overhead and higher productivity in most sectors

However, this effect will be smaller than the stocks suggest. The US stock market is cirrently greatly over valued. Expect a 1000+ point DOW drop in February, maybe even this month

That's the only minority group to vote more red than blue.

Plus, I've got a feeling that the young people who voted blue are second or third gen, and not actual refugees of Cuba. Why leave a "Socialist paradise" just to vote for it?

>give away all your valuable territory because muh human rights
>OMFG DUDE WHY ARE WE NOT PROFITABLE?!?!?!
Anglos are the niggers of Europe.

Our economy is doing amazingly atm you fucking idiot