7.28.2012

Gold still looks good – but miners look even better

Have you ever sat down and worked out your personal inflation rate? I have. The latest official statistics suggest that the consumer price index (CPI – the Bank of England’s official ‘target’ measure) rose at an annual rate of 2.8% in May. But I reckon my cost of living has risen by a lot more. Having looked at all my costs – and I mean all, from the 5.8% rise in the price of a kilogramme of tomatoes, to the 2.4% rise in the price of a loaf, to the 6% rise in the cost of filling up my car, to the whopping 14% rise in the cost of a bag of potatoes – I reckon my annual inflation rate is sitting at more than 6% – 6.3% to be exact. The chances are, unless you live with your parents and spend most of your income on new electronic goods (which are about the only things that consistently fall in price these days), your own cost of living is probably rising at a similar rate.

How to profit from America’s manufacturing comeback

Lord Green is pushed on HSBC money laundering

Citigroup CEO Vikram Pandit: It's about getting back to the basics of banking

Sceptics abound as Mario Draghi's ECB bond 'bluff' electrifies global markets

Euro exit beats begging bowl, says Cascos

Europe is sleepwalking towards imminent disaster, warn top economists

Eurozone danger mounts as Spain spins out of control

Blaming the Spanish victim as Europe spirals into summer crisis

Spanish debt crisis returns as Germany nears bailout fatigue

Monti plans 'Greek-style' takeover of Sicily to avert default

Fund managers expect more trouble in Germany

Euro tumbles as Asian funds shun EU chaos

Spain bows to EU ultimatum with drastic cuts

Germans in court battle to block eurozone bailouts

Debt crisis: ECB pledges action as southern Europe buckles

7.09.2012

What I Wish Ben Bernanke Knew About Japan

Is it time to buy Chinese stocks?

This week, the cover story in US financial paper Barron’s warns readers to expect a hard landing in China. It covers all the bases. China has relied too much on exports (not a viable model when your customers in the US and Europe have no money) and infrastructure building (not viable when you’ve built too much of it already). So now it faces a property crash, and tighter credit, just at a time when it’s trying to become a consumer-driven economy. That’s a tough task for anyone to tackle. It’s even tougher for a country burdened with vested interests who would rather keep the state-owned enterprises in control than let the private sector breathe. Oh, and on top of that, there’s a change of leadership to cope with. However, it doesn’t add anything new to the story that MoneyWeek readers wouldn’t already have picked up from our various China covers over the last couple of years. (Read this piece from June 2011 for a full rundown of the bear case: China is heading for a fall – here’s what it means for you). And that got me thinking. If the China story is only now hitting the mainstream, and there’s not much new to add to it – well, maybe it’s time to have another look at Chinese stocks…

Capitalism is in crisis but it's still our best bet for prosperity

German president tells Angela Merkel to come clean on EU debt deal

Euro break-up: Let Germany lead the northern core and France the rest

One thing is clear– the Bank knew Libor was broken and did nothing

Fraud trial for Rodrigo Rato over Bankia collapse

Debt crisis: Italy's deficit to double, but Germany's to halve

Debt crisis: Greece admits it's off track on bail-out terms, as troika inspects

Falklands oil players on the cusp of something huge

7.02.2012

The best emerging market to buy now

The $289 Trillion Problem

Debt crisis: Live

Bank of England prepares £200bn economic stimulus

Europe’s bad debts 'will bite in 2013’

Euro debt crisis: is complete pessimism justified?

Italy has won this euro battle, but not the war

After Barclays, the golden age of finance is dead

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