10.31.2011

The gold bull market: the 144-day moving average works again

European Contagion Turns Positive, Will it Last?

After European leaders announced a plan to stem Eurozone and global panic over Greece's potential default and shore up capital at beleaguered banks, positive contagion is lifting stock markets from one end of the planet to the other. What's not to love? Well, the plan itself, for one thing. It's so full of holes that unless it's tightened-up, detailed, actually agreed to, financed and executed, it's nothing but an outline in the sand. Don't get me wrong, it's a start. But, the question investors have to ask themselves is, if the plan isn't written in stone and if they've missed this rally, is now the time to jump back into equities? The answer is yes and no. Understanding where the risks are and how to position yourself to profit on the heels of this new global positivity requires looking at the European bailout plan as proposed, and measuring it against the realities constantly unfolding in the future. Let's start with the plan and measure it against what you should be watching in the days, weeks, and months ahead.

Why the latest eurozone bail-out is destined to fail within weeks

The two halves of the eurozone are locked in a broken marriage

Europe's rescue euphoria threatened as Portugal enters 'Grecian vortex'

Europe's grand gamble risks failure without ECB

10.25.2011

Recent sell-off sets up next gold rally

Is Bank of America preparing for a Chapter 11?

Fed’s Yellen: QE3 May Be Warranted

Europe's leaders need to do more than patch up a creaking structure

10.24.2011

Currency Crisis Heightens Trans-Atlantic Tensions

World power swings back to America

S&P sees downgrade blitz in EMU recession, threatening crisis strategy

Berlin experts fear euro break-up from bail-out escalation

Europe's lost decade as $7 trillion loan crunch looms

10.14.2011

How to get to a true gold standard

Gold Vs. Miners: The Wrong Question, Part I

Foreigners Dump $74 Billion In Treasurys In 6 Consecutive Weeks: Biggest Sequential Outflow In History

13 Financial Firms May Be Cut by Fitch

China's debt spree returns to haunt

Will Finland be the mouse that roars and be the first to leave the euro?

Europe's grand plan risks slow death by a thousand cuts

Coalition fiscal policy is under scrutiny because, for all the talk, we’re no nearer to the end of this economic crisis

Banque de France turns a blind eye to European financial crisis

Mario Draghi fears Italian debt spiral

German push for Greek default risks EMU-wide 'snowball'

10.07.2011

Taleb: World’s ’Problem’ Worse Than ’08

How QE2 will hit share prices and your wealth

Moody's downgrade: 10 tips to tell how safe your bank is

Investors ditch shares for cash

China's facade disguises economic troubles

ECB puts up capital to help banks, but keeps rates on hold

Bank of England pins hopes on QE2 to keep economy afloat

10.06.2011

India, China lead gold rush

5 Steps to a Global Gold Standard

How a Good Idea Became a Tragedy

Bank of England hits the panic button

10.05.2011

Chile’s Richest Family Risks Golden Touch With Shipping Purchase: Freight

Italy downgrade deepens contagion fears over euro debt crisis

European Banks Show Signs of Ill Health

Key reversal day?

Might the stock market have hit a major bottom on the very day that it also satisfied the official definition of a bear market? That distinct possibility is raised by the market’s stunning recovery in the last hour of today’s trading session, which appears to satisfy the definition of a “key reversal day”—a technical event that some technicians believe to be potentially quite bullish. A key reversal day occurs when the market records a new low and then rallies to close above the previous day’s close. And that’s exactly what happened Tuesday: The S&P 500 SPX fell to an intra-day low early in the session at 1,074.77 — which was 21.2% below this benchmark’s closing bull market high of 1,363.61, hit last Apr. 29. That’s in excess of the 20% drop that is often used as the dividing line between a mere correction and a major bear market. By the end of the session, however, the S&P 500 had rallied from that new intra-day low to close at 1123.95, up 2.3% on the session, and up more than 49 points from the session’s low. To be sure, a key reversal day in an of itself does not guarantee that the bear market ended today.

How much further will markets fall?

What to buy as Europe nears its sub-prime moment

Protectionism beckons as leaders push world into Depression

10.01.2011

'We didn't mean to track you' says Facebook as social network giant admits to 'bugs' in new privacy row

The most dangerous bubble of all

Eurozone crisis: there are no miracles in Greek tragedies

German bailout vote is 'too little, too late'

Debt crunch threatens China and emerging markets

Germany slams 'stupid' US plans to boost EU rescue fund

German turmoil over EU bail-outs as top judge calls for referendum

Geithner Plan for Europe is last chance to avoid global catastrophe

Fear gauge enters the red zone

Can China escape as world's debt crisis reaches Act III?

China 'faces subprime credit bubble crisis'

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