• GoldCore
    01/13/2016 - 12:23
    John Hathaway, respected authority on the gold market and senior portfolio manager with Tocqueville Asset Management has written an excellent research paper on the fundamentals driving...

Archive - Feb 2, 2013 - Blog entry

Bruce Krasting's picture

The President Shoots??





I used to hold onto my option for the last shot in the hope of the elusive double. It was showboating, but one time I hit it, and it was (almost) better than sex. (I was maybe 19 at the time)

 

 

williambanzai7's picture

A BuLL SKeeTeR AND A BaLLBuSTeR...





Better to move your beverages away from the computers...

 

undertheradar's picture

SNS Nationalized





Hi folks,

 

Phoenix Capital Research's picture

Merkel's Walking a Tightrope... If She Falls, the EU Could Implode





 

German Chancellor Angela Merkel has walked a tightrope over the last few years of keeping the EU together without infuriating the German populace to the point of having to abandon ship.

 
 

Bruce Krasting's picture

On Laundering Black Money - And Gold?





Do the "deciders" in the globe want to enrich those that are now parking hot money in gold? "No" is the answer.

 

Marc To Market's picture

Currency Positioning and Technical Outlook: Stick to the Paths of Least Resistance





Here is an oveview of the forces that are driving the foreign exchange market and price targets for the euro and yen.  We identify the ECB meeting as a potential challenge to the existing price trends, but expect it to see the tightening of financial conditions in the euro area as partially a reflection of positive forces, especially that banks have reduced, on the margins, the reliance on ECB for funding.  Draghi will likely attempt to calm the market down with words not a rate cut.  Also we see the "currency wars" as being exaggerated, not just because the foreign exchange market has alsways been an arena of nation-state competition, but that it is primarily in the realm of rhetoric among the G7 countries.  Few, including Germany, who have expressed concern about what Japan is doing, have objected to the Swiss currency cap.  There is not a bleeding over into a trade war.  The push back against the Japan (among the G7) appears to have slakcened a bit.  Officials prefer Japan not provide price targets for bilateral exchange rates (like dollar-yen), but if stimulative monetary and fiscal policy weakens the yen, that is ok.  

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