Archive - 2011 - Blog entry

November 13th

testosteronepit's picture

Greece's ‘Worst-Worst-Case-Scenario’





Germany makes contingency plans to deal with the fallout from the debt crisis.

 

ilene's picture

That Hyddeous Strength





The political and social disruption resulting from eurozone nations being processed like sausages will wear on investors’ nerves, in the same way that living near a slaughterhouse and listening to the screams of livestock being rendered, weighs on the mood.

 

williambanzai7's picture

A LeTTeR FRoM THe EFSF





CHECK YOUR COFFEE AT THE DOOR

 

Bruce Krasting's picture

On Stryker, Taxes, the Super Committee and Growth





A Sunday ramble...

 

naufalsanaullah's picture

Technical & Macro Update - November 2011





US data is turning up while European political hurdles are being cleared and Chinese inflation is cooling. But will the resilience of the US consumer be sustained with the current drop in income and savings? Will Europe experience any sustainable solution without the ECB engaging in explicit sovereign bond yield targeting/unsterilized QE? And will China be able to rebalance its economy away from exports and fixed asset investment toward consumption without a sharp drop in its GDP growth rate?

 

rcwhalen's picture

Sol Sanders | Follow the money No. 92 Obama [tries] to move the drama East





The combination of Mr. Obama’s continued denigration of America’s historic role, the Washington domestic economic policy tangle, the increasingly aggressive Chinese menace, all challenge the Obama Administration’s modeling a new American Pacific presence.

 

Pivotfarm's picture

Et Tu, Standard & Poor's?





The European Union next week unveils its third broadside against credit rating agencies since the financial crisis began, and this time the Big Three face a direct hit where it hurts.

Thursday's mistaken downgrade by Standard & Poor's of France's sovereign debt won't help a sector seen by policymakers as an "oligopoly" that fomented and exacerbated market turmoil globally and more recently in the euro zone.

 

November 12th

williambanzai7's picture

MaTa BuNGa





The dance of the Bunga is a poem for which each moron has a word...Bunga Hari

 

thetechnicaltake's picture

Investor Sentiment: Another Case of Selling Low and Buying High?





Is this just another case of investors selling low and buying high?

 

Static Chaos's picture

How Low Can You Go: Selling Out Taiwan To Settle U.S. Debt With China?





A ludicrous proposal from a NYT OpEd, seriously, how low can you go?

 

EconMatters's picture

Occupy Wall Street: Is It Really The 99%?





It looks like the initial public support and sympathy for Occupy Wall Street (OWS) is starting to wear thin...

 

rcwhalen's picture

David Kotok | CDS, Market Turmoil, Asset Allocation





The spike in yields on sovereign debt of Italy was attributable, only in part, to the Italian political turmoil we are witnessing. The other aspect dealt with CDS on Italian debt. Those holders thought they had one type of CDS protection. They realized from the events in Greece that they had something else.

 

November 11th

testosteronepit's picture

The Eurozone Turns Down Chinese Money And Quid Pro Quo





China has a list of demands. German industry refuses to cede ground. People shudder at becoming dependent on money from the communist regime. Clearly, the debt crisis isn’t deep enough yet.

 

Michael Victory's picture

givingThanks





50K

 

Bruce Krasting's picture

The CME acts on MF customer accounts





I think the MF Global story comes back to the front page next week.

 
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