6.23.2011

Embry - Western Central Banks Don’t Have 30,000 Tons of Gold

Jim Grant Says All The Things That Ben Bernanke Avoided During His Press Conference, And Much More

Considering the only soundbite that was relevant from Ben Bernanke's 45 minute 2:15pm oratory was that "we don't have a precise read on why this slower pace of growth is persisting" America, and the entire civilized world, could have done just as well without it. Instead, we should have listened to Jim Grant, who once again correctly identifies all the things that the Fed chairman should have said (Bernanke certainly focused on the other side): "What we are not going to get is a concession that QE2 has achieved its unintended consequences, namely a lower dollar exchange rate, a higher gold price meaning weaker confidence in the dollar, slower economic growth and a higher measured rate of inflation. Those are some of the things that have come out of this experiment and let us call it by its name money printing...

The dollar is headed higher – here’s how it will affect you

How to insure your wealth against a Greek default

Britain should save the euro – and then cash in

Greece's ace card: help us or we'll take you all down

EU leaders in race to avert Greek debt default, euro crisis

Greek debt crisis: key dates in a race against time

6.20.2011

Moody's puts French banks on review for downgrade over Greece

Sinclair - You’re Out of Your Mind If You Sell Gold Assets Now

US Housing Crisis Is Now Worse Than Great Depression

The One Thing To Watch as the Fed Abandons U.S. Stocks

The biggest question facing investors today

The Next Global Credit Crisis: Why U.S. Banks and Greek Debt Will be the Toxic Trigger

Will a hidden link between the Greek debt situation and the U.S. banking system ignite the next global credit crisis? The odds of the "next" global credit crisis are increasing with each new day, and with each new revelation. And escalating fears are hitting worldwide stock markets hard. Just yesterday (Thursday), Greece's leaders revealed that the country's socialist government is on the brink of collapse. Greek protesters - angered by brutal austerity measures that will almost certainly heighten the country's record 16.2% unemployment rate - are rioting in the streets of Athens. On Wednesday, Moody's Investors Service (NYSE: MCO) warned France's three largest banks that their exposure to Greek debt could lead to credit-rating downgrades. There are even concerns that the European Central Bank (ECB) may be technically insolvent - meaning it wouldn't survive a global financial meltdown. Investors are right to be worried. But with the European banking system's financial woes currently dominating the headlines, those investors might be very surprised to discover that it's actually the U.S. financial system that may end up as the real weak link in the event of a Greek debt default. And investors don't even know this link exists.

What the '70s bull run can teach us about today's gold market

The last bull market in gold could be said to have begun on 15 August, 1971, when US President Richard Nixon 'shut the gold window'. He ended the direct convertibility of the US dollar to gold at $35 an ounce. In effect, he took the US – and the world – off the last vestiges of the gold standard. The bull market probably began earlier than that, however. Perhaps even before 1961, when buying pressure was such that the London Gold Pool was introduced to 'stabilise' the price of gold. However, any gains were not visible as the official gold price remained at $35 an ounce, even with all the dollar printing that was going on. The bull market ended on 21 January, 1980 – at 3pm, if you were in Britain, with the London PM gold fix. Gold spiked to $850, at a time when US interest rates were as high as 20%. Today I want to draw a couple of comparisons between the current bull market and that of the 1970s, to see what we can learn.

Is it no longer good to talk

TLG's top ten firms in India

Europe better have a Plan B to tackle Greek contagion

Boris Johnson: let Greece go bankrupt and leave the euro

6.15.2011

Turk - Gold & Silver Have Bottomed, Summer Explosion Ahead

Rick Rule - Silver Will Trade Like an Internet Stock to the Upside

Unasur, looking at the EU, freezes project for common currency and central bank

6.14.2011

Too Big to Fail, or Too Trifling for Oversight?

It is not very often that business people head to Washington to explain how unimportant they are. Enlarge This Image Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images Representative Barney Frank says mutual fund and life insurance companies were not the causes of the financial meltdown. His Massachusetts base is home to many such companies. Add to Portfolio Bank of America Corporation Citigroup Inc General Electric Company SLM Corp Zurich Financial Services AG Boeing Company International Business Machines Corporation Ford Motor Company Goldman Sachs Group Inc Wells Fargo & Co Allstate Corp American International Group Inc Go to your Portfolio » But over the last several months, executives from more than two dozen financial companies and their trade groups have paraded into the Treasury Department, the Federal Reserve and other government agencies to try to persuade top regulators that they are not large or risky enough to threaten the financial system if they should ever collapse.

The SEC Just Refused To Hand Over Details Of SAC's Trades To Senator Grassley And He's Pissed

OECD predictions for global economic growth

George Soros blames officials as Greek crisis escalates

Fed chairman Ben Bernanke says US faces downgrade over debt

6.13.2011

Real metal will beat paper at banks, Eric Sprott tells King World News

Freddie Mac Refi Percent Cash-Out

Losing Streak Sends S&P 500 Looking for Summer Market Lows

It's time to be cautious on commodities

The "Pesofication" of the U.S. Dollar

Why a Greek Default Could be Worse Than the Lehman Collapse

How to profit from Germany’s nuclear freeze

We’ve used up all our options, so what next for Britain's economy?

The scandalous way thrift is still losing out to profligacy

Germany and ECB disagree over Greece

Previous entries