Archive - Jun 2011 - Blog entry

June 28th

thetrader's picture

BIS warn of Higher Interest Rates





BIS is warning of higher rates to come.

"All financial crises, especially those generated by a credit-fuelled property price boom, leave long-lasting wreckage”

Bank for International Settlements

 

Econophile's picture

Why GDP Is Useless and Deceptive: There Was No Recovery





We have not recovered from the Great Recession and thus our current economic stagnation is less a new event than a continuation of the original collapse. The basis for the so-called “recovery” was a rise in GDP, that measure of what we have spent in the economy. It’s a fairly useless bit of data.

 

thetrader's picture

Greece-Achilles Heel of Europe. On the Divided States of Europe





Many pundits talk about Europe, and we hear about experts on CNBC discussing the Greek situation, but have never understood what Europe is. It is not the United States of Europe. Geography, history, religion makes it very hard to integrate the different countries in Europe on the ideological front, but even harder when it comes to the Economy. Below a great summary for all those experts that don’t have a clue what Europe really is. Courtesey of Stratfor’s Papic.

 

Stone Street Advisors's picture

Some Perspective on YOKU's Warner Brothers Deal





The stock is up 35% on news of a non-exclusive content deal. To sell content into a market unaccustomed to paying for it. How could this possibly go wrong?

 

Phoenix Capital Research's picture

The Charts You Need to See This Week





Regardless of what Greece does, the facts remain that we are headed into another Crisis in the near future. The global economy has already begun to roll over. Social unrest has spread from the Middle East to Europe. The US is now actively raiding pension funds to fund its debt issuance, and more.

 

williambanzai7's picture

EURO FaRCe UPDaTe





May the farce be with you...

 

Leo Kolivakis's picture

Pensions Move to Direct Hedge Fund Investments?





Specialist hedge fund consultants are at “the leading edge of the phenomenon of many pension plans, especially public plans, moving to direct hedge fund investment,” said David Harmston, partner and global head of Albourne Partners' client group. Is he right?

 

Smart Money Europe's picture

'Defensive' is not always defensive





In the current market environment, many investors are positioned in what they perceive to be ‘defensive’ market segments, such as healthcare, telecoms, staples and utilities. To us, this is the wrong choice!

 

June 27th

rcwhalen's picture

Bob Eisenbeis: QE 2 and Policy





The Fed is not backing off of its desire to stimulate the economy, all it is doing is backing off of its policy of steadily adding to that stimulus. The air is not, on net, leaking from the tire, it is still in the balloon. That stimulus is still working and the key question is how effective it has been and will be.

 

Phoenix Capital Research's picture

Graham Summers’ Weekly Market Forecast (All Eyes on Greece Edition)





The world is awash in garbage debt. The only reason the banks and others haven’t taken the “hit” that they NEED to take is because they’ve bought out the politicians. Put another way, we are seeing clearly that the two primary principles of the West (capitalism and democracy) have both become jokes: alleged “capitalists” like the banks don’t ever actually see losses for mistakes and “democratically elected” leaders are in fact owned outright by the banks via donations/ bribes.

 

williambanzai7's picture

BeRNaNKe aT THe QE BaT





The outlook wasn’t brilliant for the Mudville recovery that day; The economic score stood four to minus two with but one inning more to play--And then when Greenspan died at first, and Summers did the same..A sickly silence fell upon of the patrons of that blasted monetary game.

 

Reggie Middleton's picture

The French Banks Are The First To Accept a Voluntary Greek Restructuring





Hey Mr. & Mrs. investment committee members, here's a strong investment idea. Let's take 30% of our money off of the table after losing 48% of it already, and reinvest 70% of it back into the original investment pool, but this time accept 20% in equity risk just as the country we're investing in is about to undergo a nasty, self-imposed austerity driven recession while our new fixed income position is subordinated in real time by the IMF, and soon likely to trade underwater just about as quickly. Now, where's my damn bonus??? I have an appointment with the Azimut dealer!

 

June 26th

ilene's picture

Cracks Beneath the Façade





From China, to Greece, to Stocks and Bonds, European Debt, CDS, and finally the Dollar and Oil.

 
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