1stDibs is a website with an awesome name; even cooler purpose

Via: Source

Filling in a digital space unfulfilled by eBay, Amazon, or any other online marketplace, website 1stDibs was created all the way back in 2001 to serve a different purpose; replicate the finest art gallery or auction house experience all online. Connecting art dealers with clients seeking their wares all across the globe seemed like an obscure mission a decade ago, but now, 1stDibs is uniquely, and excellently positioned to almost exclusively serve a huge market. How exactly did they do it?

Via: Sparkcapital.com

Indeed, as was previously mentioned, the company started all the way back in 2001; and from the get-go, the site sought to replicate the legendary Parisian Marche aux Puces; open air markets filled with art of all kinds. And now, close to 15 years later, the company has evolved into the leading online market place for fine art, furniture, jewelry, and other treasures; all listed by some of the best-known, and most reputable dealers in the world.

The company, now guided by CEO David Rosenblatt, removed dozens of pain points that kept both art dealers and collectors from having access to collections around the world, whether they are on the buying, or selling side. It is an area with a lot of demand, and not a lot of direct competition for 1stDibs, making them an incredibly interesting company to keep an eye on.

Oil glut could keep prices low into 2016

Via: Source

BUY! BUY! BUY! Renewable energy assets that is (or oil, I mean, why not right), as news comes out of the IEA that a world-wide glut of oil create stagnant prices for the foreseeable future. Indeed, since last November OPEC initiated a number of strategies with aim at curbing oil production in many competing, oil-producing countries. Especially those that get their oil from shale, by fracking, because the price margins on that practice are much, much narrower.

And it appears that those initiatives have been working as intended, because despite the on-set of the summer travel season and its usual bump in prices, international oil supplies are keeping those rates lower than in years passed. Basically, because the 12 countries in the OPEC syndicate can create oil at lower prices than their competitors, if they do not slow down production, other countries will be forced out of the oil business, and reliance on OPEC-produced oil will once again rise.

What would the consequences of this be? It’s hard to tell. Energy dependence is a tough spot for any sovereign nation to be in, but even if OPEC does manage to squeeze out much of its competition, how much would that drive up dependence on their products? As we stated at the beginning of this article, renewable sources of energy like wind, water, and solar are becoming more viable from an economic standpoint every day. Will those resources bridge the energy demand that OPEC seems to be stoking? What do you think? Let us know in the comments section.

What is happening to the Chinese stock market?

Ah, China. Always an interesting case study on government intervention in markets. Still not fully emerged from their communist past, the government has seemingly applied an ‘if some is good, more is better’ type approach to market regulation and stimulation, which in years past has provided some pretty impressive results. As anyone who follows the markets even casually will tell you, China usually posts a GDP growth rate of roughly 8% per year, every year. This seemingly-impossible statistic has been questioned in the past, with investors wondering how much of that was propped up by the government. But the data coming out of China, and the ways international markets responded to that information, have always seemed to fall in line with that 8% GDP growth number.

Until recently that is. Starting in early June, the Chinese stock markets have been in an unprecedented state of turmoil, something international markets have not seen before. Let’s take a look at some of the reasons why, and what some of the consequences of this instability may be.

Which way will they slide?

China’s stock market is composed of two main indexes: the Shanghai and the Shenzhen. Since their high points in June the Shanghai is down 32%, and the Shenzhen is down 40%. To put this in terms that might be slightly more digestible to some of our readers, imagine the Nasdaq sliding 32% while the Dow beat even that slide at 40%. The Dow and Nasdaq are indeed both larger, but the comparison remains. It’s getting bad over there.

However, as noted by the WSJ, this slide essentially only mirrors the massive gains that the indexes had amassed over the 12 months, as Chinese equity markets turned incredibly hot over the past year, with both indexes breaching 150% value increases year-over-year. However, the market got so hot, that as more and more players got involved, people started buying equity on borrowed money; never an awesome idea, albeit a common one, eventually turning prices downward.

With state intervention, the markets seem to have stabilized a bit in the second half of this week, and government agents are now investigating reports of rampant short-selling that had been accumulating for months. Obviously though, this just may be short term relief. The roots of this crisis probably go back to the 2008 international one, where China lowered interest rates along with the rest of the world; although it appears here that investors turned their attention toward assets, and not property as was likely hoped.

In terms of what will happen next, or what the consequences of this recent instability will be, it is still undetermined. Analysts at Credit Suisse predict increasingly drastic action out of Beijing until something seems to click, but other commentators, such as Michael Pettis, a financial commentator and professor based in Asia, believes this is all part of a long-predicted slow down of the Chinese economy; from 8% annual growth, to around 3%. An action he believes, would cut asset prices almost in half. We’ll see how the indexes themselves respond to all this uncertainty in a few hours.