Archive - Feb 13, 2013 - Blog entry
On Job Openings the Minimum Wage and Being Middle Class
Submitted by Bruce Krasting on 02/13/2013 21:37 -0500
Bottom line? $100 an hour is the minimum wage for a person with a family in NY. The Prez is offering $9.
Currency As the New WMD
Submitted by Burkhardt on 02/13/2013 19:34 -0500How do you hedge when shots are pips? The next world war will be computerized. The global economy is on the brink and battle lines are forming with one objective, restoring economic balance. Properly engineered devaluation measures would accomplish precisely that. This is a new age of currency wars. In the past countries would directly manipulate the value of their currency with trade wars and the like. But today’s currency war is a result of unconventional monetary policy by central banks, which indirectly impacts the value of a countries currency.
Draconian Cash Controls Are Coming To France
Submitted by testosteronepit on 02/13/2013 12:28 -0500The vise is tightening.
Europe's Fixed Just Like Wall Street Was "Fixed" in May 2008, How'd That Turn Out?
Submitted by Phoenix Capital Research on 02/13/2013 10:36 -0500Europe’s banks are totally insolvent and have not been fixed. No EU leader is going to tell you this because their jobs depend on convincing people that everything is fine. Bankia was supposedly “fine” right up until the truth came out. Just like the Wall Street banks were “fine” going into 2008.
In Case The Mainstream Media Didn't Get The Memo, I Crush The Apple Reality Distortion Field On CNBC
Submitted by Reggie Middleton on 02/13/2013 10:19 -0500Oh, this 35% Apple correction, drop in margins, increase in competition and decrease in competitiveness of products is a temporary thing. Seriously!!! That Reggie guy shouldn't even be allowed on TV. Really!!!
Thoughts on the Great Rotation
Submitted by Marc To Market on 02/13/2013 10:06 -0500Reports indicating that Americans have invested more in equity funds here in 2013 than they did all last year have given rise to talk of the "Great Rotation". The idea is that Americans are selling fixed income investments bought during the financial crisis and now buying shares. We are less sanguine. There is a third asset class that needs to be integrated into the analysis: cash. After surveying the data and various reports, it looks to us that the flows into equities is not coming out of fixed income but rather money market funds and deposits.
Choppy FX in Fog of War
Submitted by Marc To Market on 02/13/2013 06:38 -0500The price action in the foreign exchange market is choppy as short-term participants seem nervous after being whipsawed yesterday. Sterling fell nearly a cent to new multi-month lows following the BOE's inflation report that confirmed official expectations that price pressures will remain above target and King welcomed the recent depreciation of the point. Also of note the Australian dollar, which staged a sharp recovery off the year's lows yesterday and has seen follow through buying today, helped perhaps by gains in a consumer confidence measure.
The was nothing in the rogue G7 sourced comment yesterday that that Japanese Finance Minister Aso did not say prior to the G7 statement and before the weekend. The pace of the yen's depreciation was too fast. The market reacted to it at the time.
The Brent Oil Contract is a Sham!
Submitted by EconMatters on 02/13/2013 05:25 -0500We have gone from a supply and demand market to a funds flow market and this really sucks for consumers.
Four-Letter “G” Word Discussed on TV
Submitted by Monetary Metals on 02/13/2013 01:03 -0500Michael Woolfolk took the anti-gold position and Komal Sri-Kumar defended a gold standard on Bloomberg TV. Is it true that we don't have enough gold for a gold standard? Is it true that a gold standard is established by government fixing the price of gold?









