Archive - Oct 26, 2015

EconMatters's picture

Corporations Moving More of Healthcare Costs to Employees





It is obvious that the Healthcare Industry in the US is in need of some major overhaul, and I am not talking about a politically expedient solution as was the latest undertaking by the Obama administration.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Why The Fate Of Syria's Christians Should Concern Us All





The world is witnessing the destruction of Syria, a country with a rich history going back millennia. But there is one significant minority that faces total annihilation if the radical factions prevail: Syria’s Christian community.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

$19.6 Trillion Debt Ceiling: Done Deal?





With just days left until the November 3rd D-Day when the Treasury runs out of emergency cash and is forced to prioritize debt repayments over government spending, moments ago Politico reported that "congressional leaders and the White House are working toward a two-year agreement. A debt ceiling measure is on a parallel track."

 

Tyler Durden's picture

2 Years Of Pain Trades Amid Faltering Faith In The 3 Big Bull Beliefs





"The end of QE mattered" admits BofAML, adding that "the impact was not replaced by BoJ or ECB dollars." It is this new 'hostile' investment backdrop as liquidity cheer swings to illiquidity fear (and two years of non-stop "pain trades") that has faith in the big three bull beliefs fading fast. October's "pain trade" has been a broad-based rally in all risk assets, but there are a number of factors preventing BofAML getting more bullish now that risk has surged.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Marc Faber Fears No Soft-Landing Of China's "Credit Bubble Of Epic Proportions"





"Investors should (and most don't) realize China is a credit bubble of epic proportions," warns an anxious Marc Faber during a brief Bloomberg TV interview. "China is not just a country, it's an empire," Faber adds, and warns that while some sectors may have growth ("just ask Yum Brands" he jokes), "but other very important sectors like industrial production aren't  growing at the present time." In fact, Faber warns "I don't think China's economy is growing at all," and while policy-makers may be able to "cushion the downturn somewhat," he warns that achieving any soft-landing will be "very difficult," even as he expects China to continue devaluing the Yuan.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Globo CEO Admits He "Falsified Data" After Short-Seller Report, Resigns; But First Sells 40 Million Shares





The following story of corporate greed, corruption, and fraud is surely one of the best in recent years.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

The Fed Can’t Raise Rates, But Must Pretend It Will





"We can look forward... not precisely to a 1929-type depression, but to an inflationary depression of massive proportions."

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Even "Vote Or Die" Movement Leader P.Diddy Admits "This Whole [Voting] $hit Is A Scam"





We started Vote or Die, and the whole process was all full of shit. The whole shit is a scam... At the end of the day, I’m not telling you not to vote. But I’m saying be a realist and know that they’re motherfucking kicking some bullshit up there,”

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Wall Street Shocked As Feds Bring Criminal Case Against Goldman Banker Over Fed Leaks





Perhaps it was the public shaming of Iceland's diametrically opposite approach to 'dealing' with its bankers, or perhaps Janet Yellen needs a distraction from her own 'Fed Leak' problems, or finally perhaps Carmen Segarra's 2013 whistleblowing over the cozy relationship between Goldman and The New York Fed was just too conspicuous to brush under the carpet. Despite Bill Dudley's insistence that The New York Fed is not a subsidiary of Goldman, The NY Times reports, federal prosecutors are preparing to announce a criminal case this week against a former Goldman banker suspected of taking confidential documents from a source inside the government.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

"Our Data Is Not Good" - US Companies Warn That A Recession Is Coming





"The ability of corporations to take a 1% to 2% revenue line [gain] and turn it into 5% to 6% profit growth is waning. They’ve run out of rabbits to pull out."

 

Tyler Durden's picture

NatGas Crashes To April 2012 Lows On Weather, Inventories





For once, blaming the weather is not a 'joke'. Natural gas futures fell to the lowest since April 2012 as traders reacted to near-record inventories and mild weather that’s pushing back the start of winter demand for the heating fuel.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Russia's Mid-East Takeover Continues As Afghanistan Requests Military Assistance From Moscow





With the US on its heels in the Mid-East in the face of an aggressive Russian air campaign and a resurgent Iran, regional governments are beginning to reassess their loyalties. First it was Iraqi PM Haider al-Abadi proclaiming that his country would welcome Russian airstrikes against ISIS, then it was Jordan agreeing to coordinate militarily with Moscow, and now, in the latest embarrassement for the Pentagon, Afghanistan has reached out to Vladimir Putin for artillery, small arms and Mi-35 helicopter gunships. 

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Moody's Says Failure To Raise Debt Limit Does Not Mean Default As Jack Lew Pleads To "Honor Our Obligations"





In an op-ed released today in the USA Today, the US Treasury Secretary takes his appeal to raise the U.S. debt target once again, this time to the $19.6 trillion number disclosed here previously, by pointing fingers at "some in Congress" who "are endangering this progress by once again manufacturing a crisis for our country. By waiting to the last minute to act on the debt limit, Congress could cause a terrible accident. This is not an abstraction; failure to raise the debt limit would mean devastating impacts for taxpayers, consumers and businesses." Only this is not really true...

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Stop Blaming OPEC For Low Prices





OPEC altered the course of the oil markets last year when it decided to cast aside its traditional role of maintaining balance through production cuts. Instead it pursued a strategy of fighting for market share, contributing to an immediate rout in oil prices. WTI and Brent then went on to dive below $50 in the weeks following OPEC’s decision. OPEC is widely expected to continue its current strategy at its next meeting, and as such, no rebound in oil prices is expected, at least not because of the results of the group’s meeting in Vienna. But that raises a question about what the world of oil expects from OPEC: Why is it that the responsibility for balancing the market falls on OPEC? Why should OPEC be the one to fix the imbalances in the global crude oil trade?

 

Phoenix Capital Research's picture

Why the Fed HATES Physical Cash and Could Move to Tax It





In its efforts to prop up the Too Big To Fail banks, the Fed has made keeping your money in a bank a low value proposition.

 
 
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