• 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 2013 - Blog entry

February 14th

Phoenix Capital Research's picture

Let's Lighten Up With a Game of Name That Insolvent Banking System!





 

The game is called “Name That Insolvent Banking System.” The way you play the game is by trying to guess which the countries whose Bank Assets to GDP ratios are in the below chart. There are only seven countries and I’ll tell you that they’re all western economies in the developed world.

 

Marc To Market's picture

Financial Transaction Tax: Sand in the Wheels?





The European Commission formally endorsed the financial transaction tax agreed to by eleven of the 27 members. The tax will be set at 0.1% for stocks and bonds and 0.01% for derivatives. The tax will go into effect at the start of 2014, by which time the participating countries will give it formal approval.

There seems to be two purposes of the tax. The first is to raise revenue. The EC projects the tax will raise 30-35 bln euros annually where ever and whenever an instrument from eleven is traded. This would seem to block the ability to avoid the tax by moving transactions out of the eleven countries. It reinforces the "residence principle". This essentially means that if some one is a resident of the eleven countries, or acting on behalf of a resident, the transaction will be taxed anywhere it takes place. The other purpose is to deter the high frequency trading, which some officials see as largely unnecessary and potentially destabilizing.

 

williambanzai7's picture

HaPPY ZeRo HeDGe VaLeNTiNe'S DaY MaSSaCRe...





"Crony love is a smoke made with the fume of corruption and lies.--WilliamBanzai Shakespeare

 

rcwhalen's picture

David Kotok: Meredith, Will You Be My Valentine?





Latest from my friend David Kotok.  I think both he and Meredith Whitney are too bullish on the banks

 

Marc To Market's picture

Poor GDP Sinks Euro





After trending gently higher for the first half of the week, the euro has been sold to new three week lows in response to the disappointing Q4 GDP figures. The GDP figures are of course backward looking and more recent data, such as the PMI figures and German factory orders suggest the regional economy is stabilizing here in early Q1.

There is a middle step to go from the GDP figures to the euro and that is the interest rate channel. There has been some speculation that the passive tightening of the euro area financial conditions (including the shrinking of the ECB's balance sheet) and the strength of the euro would prompt the ECB to cut the refi rate later in Q1. The poor GDP readings bolster such expectations and this can be seen in short-term interest rates. The March Euribor futures contract is now implying 0.24% rate, having matched the lowest rate since Jan 23, or before the early repayment of LTRO I was announced.

 

EconMatters's picture

The S&P 500 and Brent Oil are basically the Same Market





This is why before and during almost any major up move in markets traders go to the EUR/USD and USD/JPY funding crosses for the juice to propel the move. It all starts with the juice, that is what determines price in markets. 

 

Sprott Group's picture

Sprott Precious Metals Round Table with Eric Sprott, John Embry & Rick Rule





In this candid discussion, precious metals experts Eric Sprott, John Embry and Rick Rule discuss a wide range of topics related to precious metals investing.

 

February 13th

Bruce Krasting's picture

On Job Openings the Minimum Wage and Being Middle Class





 

Bottom line? $100 an hour is the minimum wage for a person with a family in NY. The Prez is offering $9.

 

Burkhardt's picture

Currency As the New WMD





How 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.

 

Phoenix Capital Research's picture

Europe's Fixed Just Like Wall Street Was "Fixed" in May 2008, How'd That Turn Out?





Europe’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.

 

Reggie Middleton's picture

In Case The Mainstream Media Didn't Get The Memo, I Crush The Apple Reality Distortion Field On CNBC





Oh, 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!!!

 

Marc To Market's picture

Thoughts on the Great Rotation





Reports 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.

 
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