TRANSCRIPT
Join Jeff and Ron in this week’s episode of Cents of Things as they delve into the Halloween spirit with intriguing facts and fun trivia. Explore the surprising history behind iconic Halloween elements like the Michael Myers mask. Additionally, learn about the current job market landscape, focusing on the JOLTS report and employment trends. Discover how ongoing strikes, notably the East Coast port strike, are impacting industries and economies, and hear insights on the implications of union negotiations. Connect with the intricacies of the global supply chain and its effects on the U.S. economy, while considering the long-term impacts of wage strikes and negotiations. 00:00 Introduction and Halloween Teaser 02:08 Halloween Fun Facts 07:02 The Job Market Overview 10:43 Strikes and Their Impact 18:06 Port Efficiency and Automation 22:08 Conclusion and Farewell
Introduction and Halloween Teaser
good morning Cents of things it’s Jeff and Ron here once again with another episode of
the Cents of things for this week on this week’s show I’m going to share with you a
little bit getting us into the Halloween season The Fall season um we’re GNA kick off with five
interesting Halloween facts that I wasn’t aware of before today and then I’m gonna go over some
of the stuff that’s going on in the job situation if you remember on our last show Ron and I talked
a lot about the the jobs part of the world has been booing everything else up and that was our
theory of why the economy’s continued to not do so well but the stock market has so we’re
going to go through the job stuff today and just share with you some things that I it was
interesting to me so I hope it’ll be interesting to you so hang on we’ll be right back with you
jobs week in the start of the fourth quarter so I guess it’s good I you want to reflect on the
last nine months but you got to focus it on Q4 and by the time we reflect on it it’ll be New
Year’s already oh I know and that’s the way this year’s been and it’s going to be an interesting
Q4 because the day of the the beginning of Q4 we kicked off with a massive Port strike on the
East Coast yeah it’s just going to be a fun and interesting one going into by the way there’s a
toilet paper shortage oh I’m sure people will be running into the store I was at the supermarket
yesterday and the shelves are empty and they were talking that people were freaking out because
paper wasn’t going to come into the country even though most of the toilet paper that we use comes
is domestic so it’s domestic yeah I know used be bread and milk now it’s toilet paper now it’s
well it was yeah bread and toilet paper that was always every time in in Texas when we would get an
ice storm threat everybody would run to the store and buy bread and toilet paper which I still don’t
understand it all let’s let’s kick us off today with a few fun facts about the Halloween season
Halloween Fun Facts
one of my favorite seasons of the Year fall and and Halloween are definitely my favorites um and
I found some just fun facts about Halloween so we’ll kick off with the movie Halloween and 1978
this thing had such a low budget that they tried to use the cheapest mask that they could find for
the character Michael Myers which out which actually turned out to be a William Shatner
Star Trek mask that they messed up a little bit uh the funny part is he didn’t initially know and
then now he Prides himself on that which Michael Myers didn’t speak in the movie but I think if he
did he would be like I’m going to kill kill you at this point that was a good all right
Halloween we were discussing this that Halloween now starts in August and H gets going Halloween
is the second highest grossing commercial holiday after Christmas I would have gu Valentine’s Day
nope nope not even close Halloween is right there with Christmas at this point Ron that explains
why it starts in August they just want to get it going and get as much going it’s got to be
I realized costumes but it’s got to be all the damn candy oh I know yeah that’s the funny part
is when they get the candy out in August I’m like okay it’s gonna be gross by the time you
give it out to kids and that was probably made six months before that well I’m sure it was you
know and shipped in now now it won’t be shipped in from China or wherever it’s made all right the
Guinness World Record for the heaviest pumpkin is held by Maas it was over 2,300 lb he’s from
Belgium I think right after that this was made into the world’s largest bottle of pumpkin ale
and how did they even move that without destroying its structure no total crane thing man they just
they have these like little sling things that they pick them up and everything I actually went to one
of these like competitions one time it’s insane how big these things are you have to give it
steroids and and like insane fertilizer no absolutely not they don’t fertilize them
minimal natural no what they do and it’s funny if you actually read the book The Pumpkin plan
by oh God I can’t think of his name same guy that did profit first he actually talks about how they
grow these things so they basically find they get one of these big massive things and the reason
like this big one where this guy makes all his money for doing this is he sells the seeds and so
they actually go in and they specifically sell the seeds of these gigantic ones and then these guys
that grow these big monster pumpkins they’ll go in and they call like when the thing starts growing
and they find the biggest one in their yard they start culling all the other small ones so that
plant can actually grow these big ginor it’s a whole industry with these things way more than
probably most people wanted to know all right the names of Halloween it has been all Hallow’s Eve
witch’s night Lamb’s wool which I haven’t figured that one out yet I never heard that snap Apple
snap Apple night excuse me Sam hay which is that’s a Celtic thing and then summers’s end with the
most creative one of them all Summer’s end at that point that makes the most amount of sense versus
the other ones absolutely nope I totally agree with you and last last but not least I grew up
most of my life in Texas so this is not something that is and in in Mexican-American communities
it’s a major thing but in Mexico it’s even bigger The Day of the Dead actually the days of the dead
because they are November 1 and November 2nd so All Saints Day and All Souls day it is a massive
Marty gr like party in Mexico feasts all this kind of stuff it’s the time that the their ancest ERS
come back and get to hang out and party with them so it’s crazy I don’t know Phoenix do you get much
of the theis wos or I you know what maybe I got to pay attention I don’t remember that yeah yeah
we don’t get much up in Austin but San Antonio is just absolutely crazy with this because it’s
a massive Mexican Community down there yeah it’s interesting it’s fun it’s party well yeah it’s a
great opportunity it’s just like Marty Gro but like I said it in Mexico it’s like Marty gr on
steroids let’s kick us off with a little bit about the job situation we have covered this in the past
The Job Market Overview
but I hadn’t looked at the jolts report in a while and so I wanted to see what the trend is and if
you don’t know what jolts is it’s the job openings and labor turnover Ser survey which basically
looks at the outstanding jobs that are out there and how many are open at this time they Peak
around 2022 that was think of it all right here’s the pandemic then people started going back to
work and of course businesses are like crap we need to hire people so there was a ton of job
openings and they got to a point where they just shy of about 12 and a half thousand and
since that point they’ve been on a precipitous run backwards which I think is normal because
we’re you’re absorbing all these people back into the workforce were laid off and we stepping out
of the workforce and all that but I think the interesting thing is this thing keeps going down
and if you look at the long-term Trend it’s broken that long-term downtrend at this point we had been
on a nice steady upward trend of new jobs being created and we’ve broken to the downside on this
and it doesn’t look to be changing anytime soon so that tells me that there’s less and less jobs
so the people that were quitting because I don’t like the way my boss looked at me today that’s not
happening as much anymore because a lot of jobs are just going away that had been out there and
if you notice in 2018 and 19 we had 210 inversion in August of 19 and you could see the market was
slowing down then too as far as the job market and the overall economy yeah and then obviously
plunged Us in but once again it’s just the this is the I think the last shoe to drop non-farm
payroll change so this is another one that if you look at the 2024 Trend it is not a good sign and
remember that this period of time from about April back for a year this was all revised massively by
the government by 800,000 jobs spread over that oneyear period back from March so what I would say
is I don’t really trust TR the government’s numbers to begin with um they have not been
they’ve not shown that they can be trusted once again it’s either nefarious or they’re completely
inept which neither scenario is a good thing for our world when you’re looking at this the trend
ain’t good here and who knows what these things are going to be revised to in six to eight months
down the road we may be seeing it even worse than it is but what it is not real great at this point
no not not at all Trend the trend is bad trend is not your friend and I think the next part of it
that I started looking at this is not the this is definitely not the the chart you want to see when
you’ve been through massive inflation over the last several years basically hourly earnings are
just going down at a time when yes inflation is muting but it it’s remember that’s still
inflation on top of all the other inflation we’ve had over the last four years really three years at
this point with wages going down which is just not a good situation to be in I think it’s why
you’re seeing so many of these strikes going on with typical labor negotiations go on behind the
Strikes and Their Impact
scenes yes there’s always the threat of strikes and things like that but we are seeing some
massive strikes Ron and I were talking about this and I mentioned that Boeing Machinist are still on
strike and he said the same thing I was thinking earlier is that even going on because I haven’t
even heard it mentioned it’s been going on since August but obviously not it’s not affecting their
production or else the stock would have I don’t know yeah no it is affecting their production it’s
affecting them pretty massively because they can’t deliver they were planning on delivering like I
think 55 more planes before the end of the year and those are sitting sitting in various stages
of being put together Boeing furloughed a ton of employees outside of The Machinist side of things
but I think the the trickle down effect and we’ll talk about it in a minute the trickle down effects
even worse when it comes to the other companies that are in that supply chain for Boeing the
biggest one of course like I led on earlier we’ve got the international long shoreman Association
on the East Coast that is on strike currently has been for now three days and and the Gulf
too and the gulf Yeah so basically from Maine through to Texas down in Houston all of them are
on strike right now so nothing is coming or going from those ports it’s it is going to have some
effect we a lot of the bigger companies had the ability to reroute either reroute where they were
receiving things from or they’ve been building up so that’s a lot of these places have built
up inventory for in anticipation of this because they were expecting it uh but it doesn’t seem like
just listening to the doc workers especially it does not seem like they are willing to budge at
the very slightest at this point I find there was three interesting things with it number one that
first of all the union leader is a character oh yeah I don’t know if you’ve seen him talk
he does he fly he talks about the poorness and they’re not getting paid number one he wants an 88
% something like that an 88% wage hike over the next five years he flies in private planes yep has
a Rolex he lives in a mansion He I’ve heard czy sports cars not only that but I heard every day
that they’re not working it’s costing the economy five billion do yes something like that like these
guys the average wage is like what $49 or $59 an hour or something like that they say that there
are some managers that are making 400,000 a year and many of them have come out and said we deserve
I’m not saying maybe they should get more not but come on stop playing like you can’t put food
on their table that’s exactly correct and I think the other side of the coin is when you look at the
efficiency of the ports and things like that which I’ve got a slide here in a minute the efficiency
of the ports the two worst ports in the entire world are long Beach and La the most inefficient
they were on strike a couple years ago yeah and they were on strike a couple years ago and they
all want to fight this automation because they’re going to lose jobs and all that and if you look
at ports like antp and things like that the pay has gone up and they haven’t lost any jobs as
a result of the automation but they’re just they think that the world is going to end and maybe it
will I don’t I really don’t know I don’t care but it it but automation is Al safer yes and actually
I thought the last thing is from that from that Union head he actually said look if they don’t
meet our demands we will [ __ ] the United States yep how do you say something like that I when
I’ve heard multiple of the you don’t care about us so we don’t care about you okay you’re not
really winning a lot of friends and influencing people at this point interesting that AP did some
research and on what is going to be affected most by this and it was actually pretty interesting
there’s not a whole lot of Industries you’ve heard the bantering about oh toys and all that stuff 90%
of that stuff comes out of China and that’s going into the West Coast Port so it doesn’t really have
that much to do on the East Coast side so the East Coast side the things that are going to
be affected most are foot foot looger or Footwear is going to be probably affected the most because
there’s a lot of that comes out of Europe and even some parts of Africa and what they were saying was
auto parts are going to be a massive part of it because a lot of that’s produced in Europe and
that’s going to whack a lot of this and of course they just even coming out of China they’ll go into
the East Coast ports just to keep that distributed evenly so that’s when they’re say depending on how
long this goes uh it’ll create inflation because of the lack of supply yeah exactly and and we’re
back to the pandemic of okay I need a part for my car I remember I had to get a some body work done
on a car when the pandemic was happening and it took them we were driving a rental car for about
three weeks waiting on a bumper to come from which I would have thought would have come from
Detroit because it’s a it’s an American car but apparently came from somewhere else in the world
and they couldn’t get their hands on it at the time and took forever last but not least this is
just one one of the companies that supplies Boeing um and a vast majority of those once again this is
gone below the radar nobody’s talking about it but there are companies literally 100% shut down
because they’re in the supply chain for Boeing so what’s happening with those guys affects a lot
more bodies Downstream from there and these folks aren’t protected by a union at that point that’s
paying for them out of a strike fund they’re just literally on unemployment at this point
which royally sucks for them and going into the end of the year unless this thing gets fixed these
guys are going to be hurting pretty bad and they probably already are what is not affected the the
funny part is I’ve heard so much about oh my God this is happening during the the harvest season
and how this is going to affect first off we don’t export a lot of crap out of this country to begin
with but some of the biggest things we export are bulk grain none of that goes through the ports
that are affected most of the other stuff this goes through bulk grain shippers a lot of times
those are employed by the the companies that do a lot of this stuff so they’re employees of and
not necessarily members and they’re not members of the ILS the whatever it is il whatever so
they’re not members of it so a lot of the bulk grains are not going to be affected at all the
only thing that’s container shipped is soybeans largely which is another major export for us and
those are going to be sitting around for a while and so last but not least I wanted to share with
Port Efficiency and Automation
you the most efficient ports in the world and if you’ll notice there’s not a dang one of these that
are United States ports um ours are all in the bottom 25% of the world um China uh amazingly in
the Middle East their ports are efficient as hell because they’ve put a lot of money into
automation to make them that way and of course China Japan all those places that honestly these
are some of these are not huge kaha is a big city but it’s not a massive Port but Yokohama is a big
son of a gun I think about all the corruption and whatever and it’s still efficient yeah the funny
thing is like kaha it used to be when I was down there in the military in the 80s yeah it was a
lot of corruption it’s really not so much anymore there’s still some corruption but it’s a pretty
efficiently Run Country right now it’s actually a pretty cool place to go you don’t have to worry
about people killing you anymore like you used to have to worry about but yeah you start looking at
that and it’s Middle East China and and north or the northern part of South America that are the
top players in this and Yokohama Japan so maybe we could learn a little bit from these guys but
I don’t from what I’m hearing I don’t not as long as the union leader involved yeah I was
going to say I don’t think as long as those guys are involved in this they are just not willing to
to budge at all they want everything and they want to give nothing so it’s you’re either GNA have to
give in on one or the other but I think they see themselves as well we we control everything in
this negotiation and and one-sided negotiations never work in your favor and remember the UPS one
of the first mandates they wanted last year was we wanted full pay for a 4-day work week yeah that
didn’t happen yeah and that’s the funny one for a four-day work week okay you guys deliver six days
a week so how exactly are we gonna make this work everybody’s gonna work four days and we’ve got a
bend over 0% of your pay yeah nope I’m sorry you’re not getting it so it it’s interesting
to me I believe in unions I believe there’s a place for but it just seems like they get
greedier and GE and it’s okay the Auto Workers got a 40% pay raise so we want to double that
amount and you’re remember they have no risk yeah they have no risk if business goes down
30% they still want their raise yep they have no risk that’s exactly right there’s nothing in
there that’s fluid with the Union to say okay I know the company is hurting so instead of laying
off people we’ll take a pay cut never happened nope not going to happen and they’re not going
to let them lay people off either that’s the funny part is that I remember doing some work when I was
with Fidelity I worked with the auto plant up in in Oklahoma City and they had shut the auto
plant down in I want to say 2001 2002 somewhere in there and because of the Union contract there
were still guys that were employed if they had if they didn’t get a job someplace else that was
either equivalent to or better than what they had before on the union thing GM still had to
keep them employed inside of a plant that was basically closed at that point and so they just
came to work every day and read the newspaper some of these contracts are just really weird
when it comes to being able to lay people off so it’s just it’s interesting and if they can
get it great that’s fine but it’s goingon to but eventually we pay for it yeah we are going to pay
for it when your wages are basically doubling over a five to six year period so thanks folks
Conclusion and Farewell
for joining us as always thanks r on for being on and as always make sure that you connect with us
make sure that you subscribe to the channel and we will be back here the very next time