Archive - Jun 2, 2011 - Blog entry
Sinking Manufacturing Is A Stagflationary Trend
Submitted by Econophile on 06/02/2011 23:11 -0500The downturn in the economy caught most economists by surprise. They have yet to realize that we are now in a stagflationary economy. All the signs are there, yet they have no explanation for it. QE3 anyone?
Best performing stocks YTD? - Go figure!
Submitted by Bruce Krasting on 06/02/2011 16:26 -0500A comment on the market is that the best performing stocks this year are just junk.
JuMP THaT SHaRK! (UPdaTe: A MeSSaGE FroM JaWs QE3)
Submitted by williambanzai7 on 06/02/2011 15:54 -0500We're gonna need a bigger boat...
Thrilling Thursday - Can We Make Another Billion Today?
Submitted by ilene on 06/02/2011 15:40 -0500The idea of turning the EU into a Bankster's Paradise (where you lose sovereignty to your creditors) slapped the Dollar down to it's lows of the day and boosted the EU markets and US futures and gave us our re-shorting opportunity on oil.
Ron Paul: One-Third of Fed Bailout Loans - and Essentially 100% of NY Fed Loans - Went to Foreign Banks
Submitted by George Washington on 06/02/2011 14:41 -0500But "the little people are too small to help" ...
Even BP-Funded Scientists Find that the Use of Corexit Dispersant in the Gulf Made Things Worse, but BP Still Tries to Blame Others for Destruction
Submitted by George Washington on 06/02/2011 13:24 -0500BP tries to blame shrimpers for all of the turtle deaths ...
Fat BoTToMeD GoLDMaN GiRLS (Up Graded: KeeP On Groupon))
Submitted by williambanzai7 on 06/02/2011 12:21 -0500Number 1 on the Banzai7 charts for one year and running...[Never before played on Zero Hedge]
Could Stocks Crash?
Submitted by Phoenix Capital Research on 06/02/2011 11:55 -0500The issue now is how far the Fed will let things collapse. When QE 1 ended in April 2010, stocks dived 15% before the Fed stepped in and began hinting at more QE. By today’s numbers this would mean the S&P 500 falling to 1,160 or so. However, given the extreme degree of danger in the world today (the European banking Crisis, the Middle East, China overheating and Japan’s nuclear disaster) there is plenty of room for surprises to the downside
Why Robert Mundell Is Wrong About the Dollar/Euro
Submitted by Value Expectations on 06/02/2011 11:02 -0500Nobel Laureate Robert Mundell and his followers have made some noise of late about the need to achieve a fixed exchange rate between the dollar and the euro. About their desire for an exchange rate fix they're certainly correct, though they're wildly incorrect in suggesting that inflation and deflation can be cured if the U.S. Treasury simply ties the dollar to the euro.
Project YOKU-zuna: The Good, The Bad, and The Very, Very Ugly
Submitted by Stone Street Advisors on 06/02/2011 10:12 -0500Is a Chinese internet video company that's hemorrhaging cash really worth $4.6 BILLION?
Just ahead of Ron Paul's Fed hearing, a Fed paper questions blanket bailouts
Submitted by EB on 06/02/2011 10:05 -0500All the more relevant today, now that Moody's has downgraded Wells Fargo and Citi on concerns that the Fed will withdraw bailout support.
Shark Bite - GE Style
Submitted by Bruce Krasting on 06/02/2011 09:26 -0500We're getting fleeced, and the President hires the best fleecer out there as his adviser.
CouLDN'T STaND THe WeaTHeR...
Submitted by williambanzai7 on 06/02/2011 08:20 -0500Get ready for the storm...
Revisiting the First Silver Bubble
Submitted by madhedgefundtrader on 06/02/2011 08:09 -0500A conversation with the last surviving silver broker to the Hunt Brothers. An aggregate position was thought to exceed 100 million ounces. Several officials at the CFTC were rumored to be getting killed on their silver shorts. The Hunts’ only crime was to be right about the value of silver as an inflation hedge Commissions worth $14 million go up in smoke. (SLV).
Market Data Sheets June 2nd
Submitted by Pivotfarm on 06/02/2011 06:30 -0500S&P 500, Dow Jones, Nasdaq, Russell 2000, Nymex Crude Oil, Comex Gold, EURUSD, GBPUSD, USDJPY












