Just a few weeks ago, on
September 17, the Federal Reserve Open Market Committee (FOMC) decided to leave
the fed funds rate unchanged. In part, this was because, "Recent global
economic and financial developments may restrain economic activity somewhat and
are likely to put further downward pressure on inflation in the near
term."
The next day, September
18, stock markets tumbled. By the time September was over, many markets had
closed on their worst quarter in four years, according to the BBC. The Dow Jones
Industrial Average fell by almost 8 percent, Britain's FTSE 100 was down 7
percent, Germany's Dax was off by almost 12 percent, and the Shanghai Composite
lost more than 24 percent.
Last week, on Thursday,
the minutes of the FOMC meeting were released. Investors' response was quite
different. Barron's reported many believe a rate hike during 2015 is less likely than
it once was, and that reinvigorated investor optimism:
"Going into
Friday's session, global equity markets' valuations were enriched by some $2.5
trillion, according to Bloomberg calculations. As for U.S. stocks, Wilshire
Associates reckons that they tacked on 3.44 percent, or approximately $800
billion, over the full week, based on the gain in the Wilshire 5000 index,
their biggest weekly gain in nearly 12 months."
Why does the same news
elicit two very different responses? There are many reasons. Foremost among
them is the fact a lot of elements influence markets - investor confidence,
company valuations, central bank actions, automated trading, and many others.
What does last week's
upward push mean? One analyst cited by Barron's suggested we're seeing
a bear market rally, but only time will tell.
DO
YOU HATE DOING THE LAUNDRY? THEN, YOU MAY BE IN LUCK.
The world's most recent
laundry bot was introduced at Japan's 2015 Combined Exhibition of Advanced
Technologies (CEATEC), a technology trade show. The Telegraph reported the robot was
developed to eliminate the tedium of laundry, which (as moms and dads
everywhere know) is one of the least popular household chores. Not only does
'Laundroid' wash and dry clothes, it also can sort them, fold them, and put
them away in a cupboard.
If you're thinking, it
sounds to good to be true, you're right - for now. Digital Trends pointed out Laundroid
works quite slowly:
"The last
laundry-folding robot we saw in action took a long time to get a small towel
neatly folded into a little rectangle, and that was with the video sped up.
Laundroid is no faster, based on a demonstration at the CEATEC...It took
several minutes for the robot - hidden inside a futuristic-looking black
cabinet - to fold up a freshly washed T-shirt, according to Engadget. Although
it did the task decently, if not in Martha Stewart-approved style, it's
obviously not ready to take on a basket full of jeans and sheets."
The fly in the ointment
is the bot must determine a shirt is a shirt, and a pair of pants is a pair of
pants, and so on, before it can fold items. After all, each item is folded
differently. Socks, it seems, pose a particularly ticklish challenge. So, how
long does it take? Laundroid needs about seven hours to fold a basket of
clothes.
If you have a lot of
laundry, you may want to check back in a few years.
Weekly
Focus - Think About It
"Human subtlety
will never devise an invention more beautiful, more simple, or more direct than
does nature because in her inventions nothing is lacking, and nothing is
superfluous."
--Leonardo da Vinci,
Inventor
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