Archive - Jul 2011 - Blog entry

July 12th

williambanzai7's picture

WeiRD TiM GeiTHNeR





I notice you're not wearing any...galloshes--Weird Al Yankovic

 

Leo Kolivakis's picture

Beautiful Day?





Keep your eye on the ball and don't be fooled by all the ugly macro smoke...

 

Reggie Middleton's picture

BoomBustBlog Traders Armed With BoomBustBlog Research Caught ~10% Deutsche Bank Fall





Deustche Bank's forensics/technicals looked downright ugly. We opined on both about two weeks ago, along with parsing the CEO's warning that all should essentially start running for the hills. Many participants in mother market missed this. Well, DB got crushed in European trading, making both the forensic research and technical trade setup shine like the sun. There's much more to come! Will those triple digit short returns of 2008 come again?

 

Pivotfarm's picture

Market Data Sheets July 12th





S&P 500, Dow Jones, Nasdaq, Russell 2000, Nymex Crude Oil, Comex Gold, EURUSD, GBPUSD, USDJPY

 

thetrader's picture

European Charts





European Important Charts by www.thetrader.se

 

thetrader's picture

News That Matters





All you need to know by www.thetrader.se

 

williambanzai7's picture

NeWS CoRP TiTaNiC





Sometimes a picture is worth 100,000 words...

 

July 11th

Phoenix Capital Research's picture

The Biggest Fed Money Pump Since Lehman Went Under...





For the week ended June 27, the Fed flooded the financial system with $76 BILLION in liquidity. Bill King of the King Report puts that number into perspective noting that it’s BIGGEST increase since September 22, 2008 right after Lehman Brothers collapsed. That’s right, the Fed just juiced the system as much as it did when Lehman Brothers went under. While a shockingly large single money pump, the Fed’s generally been flooding the system with liquidity at a pace equal to that of 2008 since the beginning of the year.

 

Cognitive Dissonance's picture

Dispatches from Occupied Territory - Of Open Minds and Closed People





Our collective insanity will only provide us with answers that sustain and validate our insanity. To assume that we can apply the same thinking processes and so-called logical train of thought to unravel the insanity is to believe that the insanity itself has the capability to be sane, an obviously insane conclusion. So what do we do?

 

Econophile's picture

Unemployment: It's More Than A "Soft Patch"





As long as unemployment remains high and economic activity remains no better than flat there will be pressure on the Fed to meet its full employment mandate. QE is the only trick left in their bag. That will lead to further price inflation, a shot in the arm for the financial markets, but it will not lead to a boom in industrial activity or the estimated 250,000 new jobs a month that must be created over the next five years to create "full employment."

 

williambanzai7's picture

THe DeBT ViNCi MoRoN





From the ancient cradle of pure debt genius...

 

ilene's picture

Some Terrible Things





I have to tell you some terrible things.

 

Phoenix Capital Research's picture

If You Thought 2008 Was Bad...





Politicians who have all been bought out by the banks have fallen for this charade so far. But it won’t last much longer. Banks may get you elected… but they can’t keep you safe from a populace that is rioting outside your door. So the banks will all be taking a BIG hit in the future. This in turn will kick off another 2008 episode along with food shortages, civil unrest, outbreaks in crime, bank holidays, and the like. It will, in short, be like what’s going on in the Middle East today (though NATO won’t be bombing us).

 

Reggie Middleton's picture

Commentary From the Resident BoomBustBlog Trader: Focus on Currencies





Now it could be time to look at charts on the EUR again. the natural fundamental trade is not EUR against USD or JPY, but to find a currency in a country will little or no debt. despite their own real estate bubble, from what i read, CAD or much better AUD and NZD might be candidates. CHF despite UBS and CSFB should be as well. notice how the Swiss authorities have tightened the management of these 2 institutions, pressing them to recapitalize as much as possible and targetting higher capital ratios than Basel III.

 
Do NOT follow this link or you will be banned from the site!