Archive - Nov 23, 2009 - Blog entry
Can We Dodge the Fiscal Bullet?
Submitted by Leo Kolivakis on 11/23/2009 23:17 -0500According to David Dodge, the global financial crisis dealt a severe blow to government revenues and automatically increased some expenditures. Moreover, governments undertook stimulus spending. The combined Canadian federal and provincial deficit in 2009-10 rose to about 6% of GDP, with slightly more than half of this increase due to automatic stabilizers. The comparable deficit in the US was over 10% of GDP.
Bernanke Vs. Gold - Getting Hostile
Submitted by Bruce Krasting on 11/23/2009 17:31 -0500Gold is up big on the suggestion that POMO may be extended, "just a little". A market slap in the face to Ben and QE. Does he get it? Nah!
Deficits (and Massive Debt Overhangs) DO Matter
Submitted by George Washington on 11/23/2009 15:15 -0500Deficits don't matter . . . do they?
Fed: GDP is garbage long term
Submitted by EB on 11/23/2009 11:22 -0500A day before the first revision to Q3 GDP is released, the Federal Reserve tells us it may not be as useful as we've been led to believe.
Good morning, worker drones: This Week In Mayhem
Submitted by Project Mayhem on 11/23/2009 09:56 -0500New flu has RBD mutation , Hacked Emails Show Climate Science Ridden with Rancor , Chavez and Uribe at each other's throats again, Gold approaches PM's Jan 2010 target , Solzhenitsyn approves.
6 Primary US Equity Markets
Submitted by Fibozachi on 11/23/2009 07:24 -0500An updated snapshot that highlights how the six primary US equity indices have performed relative to each other since their March lows via a percent change chart in addition to a weekly, daily and hourly technical outlook
The Weak Dollar vs. Strong Dollar Dilemma
Submitted by inoculatedinvestor on 11/23/2009 00:21 -0500The current debate in just about every financial and economic circle surrounds the fate of the dollar. Some argue that a weak dollar is great for US exports and thus investors should not worry about the recent decline. Others contend that a weak dollar will eventually be inflationary and drive up the price of necessities such as oil. Which side are you on?








