I do think CTAs extend moves somewhat, but it's a secondary effect, especially in products that have liquid trading in the physical and ability to store things (like lumber right now)I believe that momo funds did excerbate the inflation in 2011.
I do think CTAs extend moves somewhat, but it's a secondary effect, especially in products that have liquid trading in the physical and ability to store things (like lumber right now)I believe that momo funds did excerbate the inflation in 2011.
The guy who self-immolated did so because police confiscated his produce (he didn't have a permit to sell fruit and vegetables).I would normally agree with you. In 2011, there was a surge in commodities (like chemical feedstocks) which to my knowledge was not driven by change in real demand or supply. If I recall, the rally in soft commodities is what precipitated the Arab spring as peasants rioted over the price of rice.
edit: I swore I read that a guy killed himself in Tunisia over the price of rice, but wiki is saying something else.
We're not "disagreeing" with informational parity. You are choosing to believe (1) a paper based upon an assumption about GHG effects that contradicts observable evidence and (2) a theory of cosmic rays that's been disproven both through observable evidence and experiment (CERN 2016).We will just have to disagree. Most likely sometime after both of us are dead it will be known for certain whether Miskolczi or Hansen, et al. is right, perhaps neither, regarding the role of CO2 . I won't be around to have the pleasure of saying "I told you so!".
I appreciated Overnight's important comment re commodity futures. I didn't interpret it as his having implied it was the "sole driver of food prices". It's difficult for me to envision food prices detached from where commodity futures settle.
Can you please point me to literature references for your points (1) and (2). I'd like to read them, as this topic keenly interests me.
I do think CTAs extend moves somewhat, but it's a secondary effect, especially in products that have liquid trading in the physical and ability to store things (like lumber right now)
Does such a thing exist? There seems to be overwhelming evidence that the climate has changed dramatically over the past 4.5 billion years!, with absolutely no evidence that it has stopped changing. Logic would suggest that the climate will continue to change but at a slowing pace as the solar system ages, up until the final two to three billion years while our Sun transitions to a death star.climate change deniers
)Actually the situation with regard to the one paper of Miskolczi I referenced is the opposite of what you state. Miskolczi paper is based on observation data supplied by NOAA which contradicts the theoretical computations.We're not "disagreeing" with informational parity. You are choosing to believe (1) a paper based upon an assumption about GHG effects that contradicts observable evidence and (2) a theory of cosmic rays that's been disproven both through observable evidence and experiment (CERN 2016).
https://www.realclimate.org/docs/Rebuttal_Miskolczi_20100927.pdfActually the situation with regard to the one paper of Miskolczi I referenced is the opposite of what you state. Miskolczi paper is based on observation data supplied by NOAA which contradicts the theoretical computations.
Again, if you can supply a literature reference or two, it would be much appreciated.
Climate models are testable and have been shown to work, both on historical test and in "real life". It seems, however, that you are banned on google, just like many other residents of ET.
Show me a peer reviewed publication that has proven any of the models "to be BS". Not the standard "yeah, there are possible improvements by adding X" but rather "this stuff is BS". Like I said, I double dare you and so far you're doing about as well as you did in the options-related discussions.The models have been tested over time and were proven to be BS. Go back and look at Mann's hockey stick.
Dude, seriously? I am linking articles from Nature and the best you can do is a blog by some random dude? :eyeroll:If you want to deprogram yourself do some reading here:
https://wattsupwiththat.com/
Making coin toss predictions like "it will get hotter" or "we'll have more storms" with unspecified dates is not even close to real science.