Archive - Jan 16, 2013 - Blog entry
Seaway Pipeline No Panacea for Cushing's Oil Glut
Submitted by EconMatters on 01/16/2013 22:01 -0500The real problem is that nobody ever planned for the US to be producing 7 million barrels of oil every day and rising, there is just not enough demand in the world for this extra oil.
BaTTeRieS NoT INCLuDeD...
Submitted by williambanzai7 on 01/16/2013 19:49 -0500Worth it's weight in tungsten gold...
The CIA and Other Government Agencies Dominate Movies and Television
Submitted by George Washington on 01/16/2013 15:39 -0500The Winners of the Academy Award and Golden Globe Are ... Government Propagandists
Paradigm Shift For The Healthcare Expense Monster
Submitted by testosteronepit on 01/16/2013 12:21 -0500Something has to give....
What Do German Central Bankers Know That We Don't?
Submitted by Phoenix Capital Research on 01/16/2013 11:53 -0500
Germany is now openly telling the Fed that it is done playing around. This will have severe consequences in the financial system.
When Natural Gas Replacing Diesel in Frac Jobs
Submitted by EconMatters on 01/16/2013 11:43 -0500Count on technology to bring the world into a new Oil [and Gas] Renaissance.
Burning Trees
Submitted by Bruce Krasting on 01/16/2013 10:50 -0500Today there is just soot and and no hope.
Talk Drives the Unwinding of FX Positions
Submitted by Marc To Market on 01/16/2013 06:51 -0500After relatively large moves in the foreign exchange market since nearly the start of the year, participants were particularly vulnerable to commentary that encouraged a reversal of trend. Japan's Amari got the ball rolling, suggesting that the yen's decline has been sufficient and that excessive strength had been corrected. This encouraged a bout of short-covering and took some shine off the other major currencies as cross positions were unwound.
Then Juncker's comments hit in the North American afternoon yesterday, claiming that the euro's exchange rate was dangerously high. Again the market's reaction was more about positioning than about the policy signal. Part of the demand, after all, for the euro has been coming from some of the largest asset managers returning to the Spanish and Italian bond markets, believing that the Open Market Transaction scheme is indeed a viable backstop.








