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Bullboard - Stock Discussion Forum Baytex Energy Corp T.BTE

Alternate Symbol(s):  BTE

Baytex Energy Corp. is a Canada-based energy company. The Company is engaged in the acquisition, development and production of crude oil and natural gas in the Western Canadian Sedimentary Basin and in the Eagle Ford in the United States. Its crude oil and natural gas operations are organized into three main operating areas: Light Oil USA (Eagle Ford), Light Oil Canada (Pembina Duvernay... see more

TSX:BTE - Post Discussion

Baytex Energy Corp > 10 year US treasury yield
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Post by Kelvin on Oct 03, 2023 1:49pm

10 year US treasury yield

I guess spin it and interpret it anyway you want. To me it's saying that the market is pricing in long term, persistently high inflation. If true, then where to best protect your money to return you higher than the inflation rate. Where may that be? In a commodity that is getting ever scarcer that everybody needs.
Comment by Kelvin on Oct 03, 2023 1:50pm
https://www.marketwatch.com/investing/bond/tmubmusd10y?countrycode=bx
Comment by Cobalt on Oct 03, 2023 2:17pm
Almost no talking head agrees with persistently high inflation, right now the choice with them is the economy is hot as seen by Jolt numbers vs to much debt paper about to hit the market or both but inflaton has come down faster then most thought it would. Good for us all 3 lead to higher rates killing the green econmy.
Comment by Kelvin on Oct 03, 2023 2:29pm
Well OK, but measure inflation in how many more hours someone needs to work in order to make ends meet. Measure it in time. What could a plumber buy with after tax earnings for one hour's worth of work ten years ago compared to today?  Fact is that the published inflation rates don't come close to reflecting reality. Back when I was a kid, dad could support a family with 4 kids while ...more  
Comment by Cobalt on Oct 03, 2023 2:40pm
Ya that is another story i just checked the inflation calculator 1913 to 2023, 3001.3% inflation, a 1 dollar item now costs $31.01
Comment by Kelvin on Oct 03, 2023 3:13pm
What you're saying is that someone making $1 per hour in 1913 to buy a given basket of groceries has to work 31 hours today in order to buy the same thing. Yup, that's inflation. 
Comment by Retiredgeo on Oct 03, 2023 3:34pm
That's nonsense!  A union worker today makes 90X what their counterpart made in 1913 (~35 cents/hour).  Food costs have increased 10-40X in the same time period depending on the staple. Many items such as cars and houses are far more expensive today, adjusted for inflation, then they were when we were kids.  They are also larger, better built and with modern features.  If ...more  
Comment by Kelvin on Oct 03, 2023 3:56pm
 I just checked. A loaf of bread in 1913 cost about 5 cents or at one dollar per hour wage about 3 minutes work. What does it cost today in minutes work?
Comment by Retiredgeo on Oct 03, 2023 4:03pm
5 cents out of 35 is 1/7th or ~9 minutes.  A loaf of bread now costs $3.  A union worker making $20/hour takehome can afford it in ~9 minutes.  The idea that we are living worse now than 110 years ago is nonsense.
Comment by Kelvin on Oct 03, 2023 4:15pm
So about 3 times more time. Mom, dad working multiple jobs. 
Comment by Cobalt on Oct 03, 2023 4:25pm
You need to find the average wage in 1913 fast search showed manufacturing was 14 cents to 17.5 cents an hour
Comment by Kelvin on Oct 03, 2023 4:37pm
Yeah Cobalt, too much for me to try to normalize so that we can compare apples to apples. All that I know for sure is that my friends in Ontario said that minimum wage just went up to $16.75 per hour and people are complaining that it's still not enough to make ends meet. Some economists say that wage inflation will trigger even more inflation. Because of the months long time lag between cause ...more  
Comment by JohnnyDoe on Oct 03, 2023 6:52pm
When has minimum wage ever been enough to make ends meet? It is the LEAST amount of money someone can pay you for your time.  By any measure, there's far less people living in poverty in Canada today than at any point in time. 
Comment by dllscwbysfn on Oct 03, 2023 8:01pm
Of course raising the minimum wage is inflationary. If a person gets a raise by say 2.00/hour then one would think that the person who was already at the new wage will demand to get a 2.00/ hour increase as well because why would they settle for minimum wage. Anyway this works its way all the way up the ladder.   Businesses pass the increased cost on to the consumer, inflation.  Don ...more  
Comment by VeritasVern on Oct 03, 2023 4:46pm
Um, my father who was working in the 1950's made $0.50-0.60 cents an hour. I made $3/hr in 1980 at a pizza joint. The average man did not make $1/hr in 1913
Comment by Kelvin on Oct 03, 2023 4:53pm
Great comment! So in the 50's a man could support a baby boom family making 60 cents per hour. 
Comment by jack4567 on Oct 03, 2023 8:12pm
That's right, VeritasVern--the average man did not make $1/hr in 1913. At the start of 1914 for example, the Ford Motor Company doubled its workers' wages from $2.50 US a day to $5.00 US for an 8-hour day.  The new pay rate was considered very high at the time..  
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