Archive - 2013 - Blog entry
February 21st
The Fed is Now the Fifth Largest Country in the World
Submitted by Phoenix Capital Research on 02/21/2013 16:07 -0500How many trillions of Dollars are we going to let the Fed spend? The Fed balance sheet is now over $3 trillion… making it larger than the GDP of France, the UK, or Brazil. Indeed, if the Fed’s balance sheet were a country, it’d be the FIFTH LARGEST COUNTRY IN THE WORLD.
Budget Hawks ... Until Something Gets Cut In Their Districts
Submitted by testosteronepit on 02/21/2013 12:30 -0500Army Chief of Staff: “The conundrum we have is that we don’t need the tanks”
Frontrunning the Myopic Muppets - Bank Bailout Edition!
Submitted by Reggie Middleton on 02/21/2013 11:00 -0500Read on as the MSM pick up on what I've been ranting about for 2 years. Virtually every penny of the big banks' profits consists of taxpayer bailout money. This doesn't include the ~60% of revenue paid out as bonuses, of course!
Fear In Gold Market As Hedge Funds And Retail Sell – HNW And Smart Money Accumulate Again
Submitted by GoldCore on 02/21/2013 10:29 -0500Gold has come under pressure from heavy liquidation by hedge funds and banks on the COMEX this week. The unusual and often 'not for profit' nature of the selling, at the same time every day this week, has again led to suspicions of market manipulation.
Gold’s ‘plunge’ is now headline news which is bullish from a contrarian perspective. As is the fact that many of the same people who have been claiming gold is a bubble since it was $1,000/oz have again been covering gold after periods of silence.

The Wal-Mart Indicator: the US is in a Stagflationary Collapse
Submitted by Phoenix Capital Research on 02/21/2013 10:21 -0500
Wal-Mart just called the Fed out. Inflation is already seeping into the system in a big way. Indeed, if you account for real inflation (not the Fed’s phony CPI measure), the US economy contracted by over 1% last quarter.
Obama - Let's Do Another Fannie
Submitted by Bruce Krasting on 02/21/2013 10:18 -0500The President's proposals are gimmicks to hide debt.
FX Spin
Submitted by Marc To Market on 02/21/2013 06:26 -0500Every voice in the FOMC minutes is not a voting member. Bernanke, Yellen, Dudley are the keys and they are committed to QE. That is a descriptive claim not normative. Debt market has shown little reaction to FOMC minutes compared with the dollar and stocks. PBOC drained, but did not really tighten monetary policy. Euro zone PMI poor and gap between Germany and France grows. And what's up with Abe's trip to the US ?
Gold Sitting at Ledge of 2-Year Support Cliff
Submitted by EconMatters on 02/21/2013 01:06 -0500Well Gold hasn`t had a particularly good start to the year, in fact, a good pairs trade would be going long the S&P 500 and short the Gold market for a nice 12% return in two months.
February 20th
Newly-Released Memo by Donald Rumsfeld Proves Iraq War Started On False Pretenses
Submitted by George Washington on 02/20/2013 19:42 -0500Everyone Knew Iraq Had No WMDS … and Was Not Behind Anthrax Attacks or 9/11
‘They Tell The French People Illusions and Lies.’
Submitted by testosteronepit on 02/20/2013 12:39 -0500A microcosm of what's wrong with the French economy (while the chopping block is being moved to the center)
Spain Just Issued a Warning: the System is Blowing Up Again
Submitted by Phoenix Capital Research on 02/20/2013 11:47 -0500You can choose to ignore this and believe that Europe’s Crisis is fixed just as EU political leaders claim. But Europe in general is out of options in terms of solving its debt crisis.
WHeRe'S THe MeaT?
Submitted by williambanzai7 on 02/20/2013 10:29 -0500I wouldn't order something called a "meat sandwich", would you?--George Carlin
The NY Times Debate On Fixing The Rating Agencies: First Realize They're Not Broken!!!
Submitted by Reggie Middleton on 02/20/2013 09:51 -0500If it ain't broke, how do you fix it? Here are a variety of solutions from practictioners, academics and investors.
The Stock Market is a Giant Ponzi Scheme
Submitted by EconMatters on 02/20/2013 08:39 -0500Hence the cost basis of their investments is much higher with each artificial liquidity injection. This is great for current retirees, but at the expense of future retirees who now have inflated assets that will deflate once the Fed takes away the proverbial punch bowl.










