5.30.2011

ROSENBERG: THE 7 MAJOR RISKS BREWING

The Operator Of The World's Largest Oil Tanker Fleet Gives Up On The Global Recovery

Asian Tiger Sinks Teeth Into Gold

Don't Fret Over Europe's Debt Crisis – Oil Prices Will Bounce Back

Ebenezer Scrooge: The Ideal IMF Successor

Dominique Strauss-Kahn's forced resignation from the International Monetary Fund - and the search for an IMF successor - is a blessing in disguise. Strauss-Kahn's term in office saw a vast expansion of the IMF's activities, a fact often used to praise his tenure. But a close examination yields a very different picture. Under Strauss-Kahn, who took over as the IMF managing director in September 2007, nearly every intervention has resulted in failure: The IMF allocated capital to places it shouldn't have allocated capital to, and propped up governments that shouldn't have been propped up. The ideal IMF successor to Strauss-Kahn would be Ebenezer Scrooge - as a prelude to closing the institution down altogether. That's because the IMF is a waste of money ... your money. To understand why, let's take a look at what the IMF is, and see how it works.

Why China raising interest rates is the best advert for investors

They can try to ‘delay and pray’ but the euro is running out of time

The Bank of England's astonishing escape from the financial crisis

It's ever more obvious, Greece must leave the euro

How the euro crisis end game might look

5.24.2011

REAL US HOUSING PRICES 1991-2010


As Lenders Hold Homes in Foreclosure, Sales Are Hurt

To Awaken a Sleeping Giant: After Missing the Mobile-Computing Boom, What's Next For Intel Corp. (Nasdaq: INTC)?

The art market is warning of a slump in China

Oil price jumps as Goldman Sachs raises forecasts

Moody's warns 14 UK banks face downgrade

How the euro crisis end game might look

5.22.2011

An Interview with Hugo Salinas Price on a Return to a Silver Mexican Peso

Greece suffers fresh blow as credit rating cut by Fitch

Forget LinkedIn - some tech stocks are still cheap

Another IMF leader from Western Europe would be a historic mistake

Royal Bank of Scotland misses lending target

David Cameron seeks UK philanthropists in the mould of Gates and Buffett

The Bank of England is failing this country

5.20.2011

The US dollar is cheap – but it could get cheaper

Global Commodity Prices: Soaring Worldwide Population Growth and a Can't-Miss Profit Play

If you read the newly released United Nations report on global population trends, you can reach only one conclusion about the long-term outlook for global commodity prices. They're going higher. Much higher. In its report, "2010 Revision of World Population Prospects," published May 3, the UN now estimates that the global population will reach 9.3 billion in 2050, which is an increase of 150 million from the 9.15 billion it projected in its 2008 forecast. Nor is that the only revision the UN made to its 2008 forecast. Instead of peaking in 2070, as it had previously predicted, the UN now says the world population won't peak until after 2100, when it will reach 10.1 billion - 44% higher than it is today. The key takeaway: Given this expectation for worldwide population growth, it's clear that the rise in global resources prices we've seen since 2002 is for real, and is likely to continue for the long term. The effect on global commodity prices will be clear - and dramatic. Oil prices, metals prices and - above all - food prices are likely to be much higher in 2050 (in terms of that era's overall purchasing power) than they are today.

Which will crack first, the euro or the dollar?

When online shopping makes financial sense

Why RBS will be the success story of 2012

The wrong kind of inflation

At last, a policy that’s better than a bail-out

5.15.2011

Japan nuclear power expansion plans abandoned

Why Inflation in China Could Lead to Another Global Recession

The Future of the Euro: Why Europe's Key Currency is Doomed

The Eurozone project has seen better days, which is why the future of the euro isn't a bright one. In fact, as all the latest speculation about Greece either abandoning the euro currency - or being booted out of the Eurozone outright - is demonstrating, "the market" is about to apply a level of pressure well beyond what the Eurozone and European Union (EU) were designed to handle. The number of sovereign states in the EU that are facing difficulty selling new debt, or even a rollover of current debt, is growing. The Eurozone and the EU are both in trouble. Clearly, the structure that exists today is flawed and will not withstand the rigors and pressures that are headed directly its way. The ability to kick the can down the road is about to end, and with it some hard decisions will need to be made by the political and wealthy elite. Let's take a closer look.

The Inflection Point: Why the U.S. Dollar is Ready to Rebound

Spectre of stagflation reappears as the excesses of QE hit home

Canadians outbid LSE for Toronto exchange

Carpetbaggers of finance have killed the incentive to save

5.08.2011

Soros and Paulson move in opposite directions as gold declines

Volcker warns of danger from U.S. deficits

Eric Sprott on Silver

Weekly Claims Soar as Job Market Recovery Turns Sour

Silver, Gold Futures Dropping as Soros Reported to Have Sold

Come to Canada, Clark Kent

Should you buy into commodities giant Glencore?

A small-cap success story in a billion-dollar market

Silver could fall as far as $22 – but the bull market isn't over

The six Glencore billionaires...and one multi-millionaire

We need an independent probe into this woeful RBS tale and FSA shambles

Chris Huhne needs a lesson in economics

UK is not Portugal, but it could become so

5.03.2011

Change in U.S. Housing Prices: 2000-2010


Richard Russell - China on Massive Gold Accumulation Program

The Top Emerging Market of 2011: It's NOT China

Banks face European probe into credit-default swap trade

America's reckless money-printing could put the world back into crisis

Why the power of the mighty Federal Reserve is finally on the wane

Portugal reaches bail-out agreement

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