Archive - Mar 3, 2010 - Blog entry
The First Domino?
Submitted by Leo Kolivakis on 03/03/2010 23:33 -0500"The situation has the makings of an Aeschylean tragedy. If help isn't forthcoming, little Greece--whose economy is just 3 percent of Europe's GDP--could, against its will, set off a chain reaction that pulls down Portugal, Ireland, Spain, perhaps even Italy, and thereby throws Europe's, and then America's and the rest of the world's, fragile recoveries into reverse."
Smoking Swap Guns Are Beginning to Litter EuroLand, Sovereign Debt Buyer Beware!
Submitted by Reggie Middleton on 03/03/2010 15:31 -0500If the contents of this post doesn't give you pause and cause you to doubt the future of the Eurozone's integrity, I don't know what will. Here's a quick quiz. What well known (in name only) Italian American has a significant chunk of the European Union Sovereign nations apparently modeled their financial engineering from?
No Wonder the Economy Isn't Improving
Submitted by George Washington on 03/03/2010 13:18 -0500Heck of a job, guys ...
Chinese Yuan v The U.S. Dollar: In The Case of Global Reserve Currency
Submitted by asiablues on 03/03/2010 12:14 -0500The dollar’s status as the world's preferred reserve currency has come into question amid a ballooning budget deficit that keeps the U.S. dependent on foreign financing. It is now a matter of "when" rather than "if" the Chinese yuan will replace the U.S. dollar as the global reserve currency.
It's Official: The US Housing Downturn Has Resumed in Earnest
Submitted by Reggie Middleton on 03/03/2010 06:33 -0500The year 2009 was the year of reflation theories and bubble blowing. Theses of "Green Shoots", catching the bottom, and QE reigning supreme were the order of the day. Sure enough, asset prices (nearly all of them) went one direction, straight up. We all saw it coming, but guys like me who actually count the money and rely on the fundamentals didn't believe it was a sustainable gain. It wasn't a bull market, but a bear market rally. After nearly one year, the reflationists have had their hay day, or have they?
Currency Markets Approaching Inflection Points
Submitted by Chopshop on 03/03/2010 04:00 -0500Daily snapshots of AUDCAD, EURJPY, EURUSD, USDJPY & USDCHF
Dinner With Nobel Prize Winner Joseph Stiglitz
Submitted by madhedgefundtrader on 03/03/2010 01:27 -0500The outlook for the economy is bleak, at best. The stimulus package should have been at least $1.2 trillion. Any major spending cuts will produce “Hoover” outcomes. An extreme form of “trickle down economics" quickly reached a dead end. The banks’ accounting loopholes were so imaginative that not only were shareholders and regulators deceived, senior management was clueless as well. The winner of the Nobel Prize in economics reveals how “information asymmetry,” led to the financial crisis. The repeal of Glass-Steagle was a disaster. No wonder Main Street feels cheated.







