This Forbes article suggests Australia is in great shape with its mineral quantities, location to Asia and sheep among other things. I hope any of the pessimists on this forum have a good debate against further improvement in Australia's prosperity.The International Monetary Fund forecasts 1.8 percent growth for Australia's economy in fiscal 2009, Swan said last week.
"While the global financial crisis is causing a global recession, Australia is expected to continue to record modest growth and compares favorably with most other advanced economies,'' he said in an e-mailed statement.
Reflecting an ongoing shift away from Europe and North America to Asian markets, the bulk of Australia's A$197 billion in 2009 exports went to China (22%), Japan (19%), Republic of Korea (8%) and India (7%).
Positive Influences on Equity Prices
Australia is a major supplier of minerals and energy (mainly coal and natural gas), which has stimulated significant foreign direct investment into Australia's resource industry from Asia, Europe and the US. Australia's 86 million sheep produce the majority of the world's wool, and with 25 million head of cattle Australia is the world's largest exporter of beef. Counter-seasonal production versus the northern hemisphere, a reputation for high-quality and advanced growing techniques support Australia's agricultural competitiveness.
Australia ranks first in the world in the production of bauxite and alumina; second in gold, lead, nickel, uranium oxide, and zinc; third in iron ore; fourth in coal and silver; and fifth in copper. Australia possesses 24% of the world's brown coal reserves, 5% of its black coal reserves and 38% of its uranium reserves. It exports approximately two-thirds of its domestic energy production (even though it is a net importer of crude oil and refined petroleum products). Australia's crude oil reserves are limited and decreasing, but its natural gas resources (located primarily offshore Western Australia) are immense and have increased fourfold in the past 20 years.
hello,
Dont have to listen to Swan, just look around the street man for whats going on, paradise
What a sour life the doom and gloomers must live
Thankyou
Professor robots
Spot on there mate. I went to my local Bunnings Mega Store yesterday, the car park was over flowing and the store was doing a roaring trade. People were out and about spending in droves and this is in a real working class area. Some people really got to stop reading these end of the world stories and just get back to basics and enjoy life, cheers.
I went to my local Bunnings Mega Store yesterday, the car park was over flowing and the store was doing a roaring trade. People were out and about spending in droves and this is in a real working class area. Some people really got to stop reading these end of the world stories and just get back to basics and enjoy life, cheers.
Saturday to visit the local Bunnings Mega Store! Good to see it's busy on it's most popular day. I went in Thursday, I thought, this place is dead. No doubt location location, the old Gold Coast builder must be doing it tough.
Spot on there mate. I went to my local Bunnings Mega Store yesterday, the car park was over flowing and the store was doing a roaring trade. People were out and about spending in droves and this is in a real working class area. Some people really got to stop reading these end of the world stories and just get back to basics and enjoy life, cheers.
Yes, good vision.Correct me if I'm wrong but isn't Bunnings a DIY store? Couldn't an increase in trade at Bunnings be a signal that more and more people are economically forced to do their own handywork rather than pay somebody else?
Bunnings is hardly a barometer for prosperous times. If anything it is the opposite.
That's what I noticed too, very hard finding a car park these days.I'm seeing packed stores in a blue collar town as well. I think people are spending a bit wiser though. Still the malls are packed.
It's the spending people are doing is what I tried to point out. If anything I really thought about buying some Wesfarmers shares again as no other Hardware store comes with coo-ee of this mob, they have everything!Bunnings is hardly a barometer for prosperous times. If anything it is the opposite.
The numbers could go either way from now. At a long term significant turning point this year I think.It's the spending people are doing is what I tried to point out. If anything I really thought about buying some Wesfarmers shares again as no other Hardware store comes with coo-ee of this mob, they have everything!
I'm seeing packed stores in a blue collar town as well. I think people are spending a bit wiser though. Still the malls are packed.
If anything I really thought about buying some Wesfarmers shares again as no other Hardware store comes with coo-ee of this mob, they have everything!
I'm seeing packed stores in a blue collar town as well. I think people are spending a bit wiser though. Still the malls are packed.
Saturday to visit the local Bunnings Mega Store! Good to see it's busy on it's most popular day. I went in Thursday, I thought, this place is dead. No doubt location location, the old Gold Coast builder must be doing it tough.
Correct me if I'm wrong but isn't Bunnings a DIY store? Couldn't an increase in trade at Bunnings be a signal that more and more people are economically forced to do their own handywork rather than pay somebody else?
Bunnings is hardly a barometer for prosperous times. If anything it is the opposite.
Have you tried to get a tradesman lately? AND when you do get them to actually quote the job your platinum black does not have enough limit on it to cover the charge! No wonder the DIY's are doing it for themselves.
I would have thought Bunnings was the perfect economic indicator which means that people are spending money to fix up their homes and or their investment properties? What else do you go to Bunnings for?
I guess that means that you are understanding as to the reasons why interest rates will need to rise further?
You go to Bunnings because:
1) You can't afford a tradesperson (as you have mentioned)
2) You are deciding to stay put in your house as you cannot afford to move
DIY means DIC (Do-It-Cheaper),
I expect Bunnings to be one of the few companies that continues to do well while the RE market and general economy suffers.
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