Description
Why the cost of moving raw materials across the ocean is the only economic indicator that cannot lie. While Wall Street analysts obsess over fluctuating stock prices and consumer confidence surveys, the truest pulse of the global economy is quietly measured on the high seas. If you want to know if a global recession is coming, do not look at the banks; look at the price of shipping dirt.The Baltic Dry Index tracks the cost of moving major raw materials-coal, iron ore, and grain-across the world's oceans. Because these materials are the absolute foundational building blocks of all manufacturing, the BDI is a pure, unmanipulated leading indicator of future industrial production. Unlike stocks, the supply of massive cargo ships cannot be altered overnight to manipulate the price.This book explores the brutal, cyclical economics of international shipping and how a drop in freight rates accurately signals economic collapse months before the mainstream media notices.Learn to read the invisible logistical currents of global trade and bypass the noise of the financial markets to understand where the world's economy is actually heading.



