2 comments

  • washadjeffmad 30 minutes ago
    The leading indicator to me was when I started spending more time trying to recover from identity thefts every year than not. The frauds became novel, no longer just maxing out retail credit lines to baby goods and lingerie shops, but exploiting internal corporate processes that were tedious to discover, explain, and clear. I'm not really served by credit, so it felt like I was going through a lot of effort talking with companies, writing affidavits, and getting police reports for nothing.

    So I stopped fixing it.

    And guess what? Not having perfect credit made me such an unattractive target that it hasn't happened since. I write letters of dispute to the bureaus, but if they choose not to remove anything (the debt collectors are much easier to convince, by comparison), I suppose that's as far as I'll go until I need it.

  • SilverElfin 1 hour ago
    Rising defaults on car loans, increasing term lengths for car loans, people living off credit cards, increasing unemployment, reduced job availability, divisive politics, unstable foreign relations, out of control spending/debt, … and yet a stock market that is at record highs. I also wonder why gold and crypto are doing so well at the same time. Everything is high but it seems like a bad situation. And yet, people will get laughed at for predicting a recession or some other event, because it’s hard to predict the timing. Still, I feel like something has to give.
    • internetter 36 minutes ago
      Yeah I've been slowly taking stuff out of the market, it feels illogically high.
      • SlightlyLeftPad 26 minutes ago
        I’ve been quickly taking stuff out of the market. No one wants to say we’re in a recession because it would make the stock market go down. The fact is, we are in a recession. It’s an oxymoron.
      • tzs 17 minutes ago
        Where are you putting the stuff you take out of the market?
    • theandrewbailey 1 hour ago
      > and yet a stock market that is at record highs.

      Isn't that all because of Big Tech? All the other Fortune 495, or 995 companies are mostly flat or down over the past few years. The AI bubble is effectively a private economic stimulus program. When that money stops, everyone's going to have a bad day.