Are moms loved more than dads? Do kids secretly have favorites, just like parents? A quick glance at spending on their respective holidays might suggest that mothers are more loved- or at least more expensive. On average, spending on mom for mother’s day outpaces the paternal equivalent by almost $50 by adults 18+. In 2013, spending was up 40% for …
Blame Baby Boomers for Stagnant Income
Between 2009 and 2014, 5.5 million people retired in America – the largest number ever seen across a five year period and more than double the five year period preceding it. That’s 5.5 million peak-earners leaving the workforce. The problem with the popular median household income statistic is that it is an aggregate stat based on granular data. Data changes …
“B” is for Below Average
Should you be proud of your straight-A student or disappointed with an all B report card? As a result of instructors and institutions gradually lowering standards, the bell curve grading style has disappeared and high marks are saturating GPAs across the country. 43% of grades across all post-high school institutions in America are As, 34% Bs, 15% Cs, while Ds …
The Most Dangerous Job in Sports
If you think playing in 120⁰ heat of Qatar would be miserable, how about those working all day constructing the sites for the 2022 World Cup? Since Qatar won the rights to host in December of 2010, there have been 1200 worker deaths attributed to the construction of the facilities. Is this the cost of the games? Or is the …
Does Your Child Play Soccer? Teach Them Another Language.
So your son is a superstar soccer player, what can you do to help him? Teach him Spanish. Or French. Or German. When comparing the average annual salaries of players on 333 teams playing seven sports around the world, eight of the top ten are soccer clubs, four are located in countries that speak a language other than English. Soccer …
An Unprecedented Shift in Demographics
The millennial generation has surpassed the baby boomers as the largest contributors to our nation’s workforce. Those born between the early 1980’s and early 2000’s have created the most populous generation of workers ever. This generation may also remain in the workplace longer than any group before them. As data shows, and projections suggest, technology and health care will continue …
Who Should Be In Charge, Men or Women?
Bringing the gym class favorite “boys vs. girls” into the workplace, Gallup sought to answer the question of which gender is the preferred sex to have as a boss. They found, as shown in the graph, women are more opinionated in regards to gender in the workplace then men. Though both sexes prefer men as managers, women feel much stronger …
Contrary to Popular Belief: The United States has Really High Interest Rates
Everyone has heard how incredibly low the United States’ interest rates are. The pressing question now is when will the Fed commence ‘Lift Off’? At what increments will rates rise once they begin the program? We have been hearing for a long time that rates have nowhere to go but up. Maybe that is not the case. Comparing America’s current …
Why Won’t Big Bad Wal-Mart Pay Their Employees?
Walmart has been the easy target during the last twelve months as activists push for an increase in minimum wage. Why wouldn’t they be, right? They bring in billions of dollars while paying some of their workforce minimum wage- surely they can afford to cover the costs of an extra dollar or two per hour for those employees, right? As …
Average Is Rare
The historical annual return of the S&P 500 index back to 1957 is 9.62%. Interestingly, the market almost never returns the average. In 1958, the market returned 43%, while in 2008, it dropped 37%. To try to visualize how rarely the index returns just its average, this chart shows one year moving averages in blue. You can see drastic variance …
Apple a Day…
In February of 2008, Bank of America was added to the Dow Jones Industrial Average. Five years later, it was taken out. This month, we were notified that Apple would be joining the price-weighted index. They were a candidate to be added back in 2008, with a market value of $100 billion and only one full year of iPhone sales. …
1.7 Million of Apple’s $10k Watch – Gone
Apple has a habit of generating a lot of buzz around their product launches. During their most recent event, the markets responded in a very timely fashion. In the annotated graph, you can see how Apple traded in response to real time announcements. Cheaper Apple TV? Good. New Macbooks? Awesome. Apple watch? Sell off. From the intraday high to the …
Bracket Buster
Over the next three weeks sports fans, basketball enthusiasts, and causal spectators across the nation will catch a case of March Madness. There will be a lot of numbers and statistics thrown around about the 68 teams, 67 games, and 75+ years of history related to the tournament. Over 70 million brackets will to be filled in and over $9 …
What’s for Dinner?
For the first time since the data has been recorded, sales at restaurants and bars in the United States have eclipsed those of grocery stores. The recent jump in discretionary spending in this space has pushed wages in the restaurant and bar service industry higher recently as the labor market has tightened and demand has increased. We hear a lot …
Chances of Defaulting Decreases with Larger Loans
It seems counterintuitive, but the less debt a student leaves school with, the greater risk they are of defaulting on their loan. The Consumer Credit Panel (CCP) teamed up with Equifax to create data for the Department of Education and this was their finding. Students who leave school with less than $5 thousand in student loans are 61% more likely …
Does Singapore Provide Better Health Care Than the United States?
Singapore is an Asian country with twice the population of Chicago. The country has one of the highest GDP Per Capita measurements in the world, higher than the United States. With greater production per person tied to a smaller and more manageable sized population, Singapore is able to get the best bang for their health care buck. They rank number …
How Legislation Killed the Community Bank
The total number of banking companies in the United States has significantly decreased in the past couple decades. At the same time, regulations on the industry have increased and legislations have become more complex. The compound effect has not been a broad drop across the sector, but rather a distinct decrease in small or single-office banks. As the government and …
Nobody Really Saw What Happened in The Super Bowl
Some things need to be put into perspective. The Super Bowl is small potatoes compared to other sporting events outside the United States. Super Bowl Sunday is an entire day dedicated to drinking, eating, and yelling at terrible play calls. There have been petitions to make the following Monday a national holiday (read: recovery day). It’s sports’ greatest day… according …
Thanks A Lot, Obama?
Mr. President is back in the nation’s good graces. Can his approval rating be tied solely to prices at the pump? This chart- with approval ratings from Gallup, over gas prices from the US Energy Information Administration, shows a strong correlation between the two data points. Be wary that the gas price axis, on the right, graphs higher prices towards …
2015 Big Mac Index
The Economist has updated their “Big Mac Index”. The index is a creative way of showing vales of goods and services across the globe. The study is performed annually and is intended to visually represent Purchasing Power Parity (PPP) – the idea that long run exchange rates will normalize towards equal prices for a like basket of goods and services. …
Home Spreads are Normalizing
It has been 6 years since the end of the Great Recession. During which, the economy has slowly recovered. In 2008 and 2009, houses were being sold out of necessity. We saw huge spreads between asking price and sales price. As the economy recovered, frictional costs lowered, and transactions came about for different reasons, the data shows the spread decreasing …
Crowdfunding
In 2014, there was a boom of what is called ‘Crowdfunding’. Using the power of the masses, individuals and start-ups harness the power of small donations in big quantities. When sites like Kickstarter began, there were questions and concerns. Why would people donate money to fund projects on the internet? How will it affect venture capitals? Then the idea took …