Archive - Nov 12, 2014 - Story

Tyler Durden's picture

Russell Napier Declares November 16, 2014 The Day Money Dies





On Sunday in Brisbane the G20 will announce that bank deposits are just part of commercial banks’ capital structure, and also that they are far from the most senior portion of that structure. With deposits then subjected to a decline in nominal value following a bank failure, it is self-evident that a bank deposit is no longer money in the way a banknote is. If a banknote cannot be subjected to a decline in nominal value, we need to ask whether banknotes can act as a superior store of value than bank deposits? If that is the case, will some investors prefer banknotes to bank deposits as a form of savings? Such a change in preference is known as a "bank run."

 

Tyler Durden's picture

The Economic End Game Explained





Throughout history, in most cases of economic collapse the societies in question believed they were financially invincible just before their disastrous fall. Rarely does anyone see the edge of the cliff or even the bottom of the abyss before it has swallowed a nation whole. This lack of foresight, however, is not entirely the fault of the public. It is, rather, a consequence caused by the manipulation of the fundamental information available to the public by governments and social gatekeepers.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

More Humiliation: China Furious At "Disrespectful" Nicorette-Chewing Obama





"The chew seen around the world," as President Obama chomped on Nicorette gum during the recent APEC summit ceremonies, has sparked outrage in China, describing his behavior as "rude" and "inappropriate." We suspect that explains why he was - once again - relegated to the 'old wives club' at dinner...

 

Tyler Durden's picture

392 Weeks?





Just one chart...

 

Tyler Durden's picture

War-Making And Class-Conflict





Because the masses in a democratic polity are deeply imbued with the ideology of egalitarianism and the myth of majority rule, the ruling elites who control and benefit from the state recognize the utmost importance of concealing its oligarchic and exploitative nature from the masses. Continual war making against foreign enemies is a perfect way to disguise the naked clash of interests between the taxpaying and tax-consuming classes.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Did The BoJ Quietly Peg The Yen To Gold?





For 14 years, as Japan's economic demise grew more and more evident, its currency devalued relative to gold (the only non-fiat numeraire). When Abenomics began, the trend began to stabilize... but for the last year or so - as The Fed tapered - JPY and Gold have practically flatlined around 132,000 JPY per ounce. This 'odd' stability stands in strangely stark contrast to the volatility and trends in the USD, JPY, and Gold over this period. Even amid the collapse in JPY in recent weeks, it has remained firmly inside a 3% envelope of the 'peg'.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

24 Reasons Why Millennials Are Screaming Mad About America's "Unfair" Economy





Do you want to know why Millennials seem so angry?  We promised them that if they worked hard, stayed out of trouble and got good grades that they would be able to achieve the "American Dream".  We told them not to worry about accumulating very high levels of student loan debt because there would be good jobs waiting for them at the end of the rainbow once they graduated.  Well, it turns out that we lied to them.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

An FX Trader's Guide To Japanese Policy Makers' Language





With the yen reaching seven-year lows, Japanese officials are being pressed by exchange-rate questions from reporters and lawmakers. As policy-makers weigh the costs of the weaker currency along with its benefits, here is a guide to gradations of concern at exchange-rate movements based on remarks in the past.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Sentiment Is "Off The Charts" Bullish





Hopefully, these charts will give you some food for thought. With everybody so bullish, what could possibly go wrong?

 

Tyler Durden's picture

iPhones Are For Amateurs: With 22 Days To Go, The "Black Friday" Line Has Started





"We could have started later, but then we wouldn’t be sure to get first in line," says Vickey Torres, camped outside the Beaumont Best Buy 22 days before Black Friday. "Some people say we’re crazy."

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Brazil Builds Its Own Fiber-Optic Network... To Avoid The NSA





Is this what they mean when they say 'net neutrality'? From Brazil’s rejection of American IT products - estimated that American firms will lose out on over $35 billion in revenue over the next two years - to this week's announcement that it will be building a 3,500-mile fiber-optic cable to Portugal in order to avoid the grip of the NSA, it appears the Red, White, and Blue Scare has now replaced the Red Scare of the Cold War era.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

The 1937 Recession





This Austrian School interpretation of events fits the facts rather better than the monetarist account.  The lesson for policymakers today is uncomfortable.  For, on this view, if there is a parallel with the 1930s, the damage has already been done.  It was done when the Fed allowed funds available for investment in capital markets to balloon, not this time through unsterilized gold inflows but through its QE experiment. 

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Frackquake: 4.8 Magnitude Earthquake Felt Throughout Kansas





While it is unclear if moments ago the Mississippian Lime Play under south Kansas was the first major shale quake to hit Kansas, or this was simply the first yet to be named shale company going Chapter 11, but moments ago the USGS reported that a 4.8 quake located 30 miles SSW of Wichita as well as a various other smaller quakes in north Oklahoma,shook the two states.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

The St.Louis Fed Explains Why Banking Panics Are More Likely Under A Gold Standard





The U.S. and many other economies left the gold standard more than 40 years ago, yet advocates periodically call for its return, saying that it would curtail or prevent inflation. In these brief clips from the St. Louis Fed video series, David Andolfatto, a vice president and economist explains the gold standard noting "most economists believe a return to the gold standard would not be a wise policy," and "under the gold standard, banking panics are more likely to occur," and then pointing out somewhat stunningly that "however, the fiat system employed by the Federal Reserve has been largely successful in maintaining low inflation and price stability." Enjoy...

 

Tyler Durden's picture

The Flipside To Rigged FX Markets: "The Most Consistent Thing Is Losing"





As today's latest example of pervasive, apparently endless criminality at the world's largest banks, where once again the shocked public is exposed to a culture of sociopathic, unchecked greed and perpetual raping of clients, showed, one is either part of the all too literal "cartel", or one loses money. However, for those who are unfamiliar with the nuances of FX trading, one doesn't even have to be on the other side of the world's most criminal, above the law, cartel of bankers to have no P and only L: the fundamental premise of currency trading, whereby one can and will be stopped out thanks to leverage as high as 50x - by others but mostly by one's own brokers as we learned today courtesy of JPM, Citi, RBS, HSBC and UBS - is the very same reason why as retail FX trader Dan Gratton, a 71-year-old retiree who lives on Social Security in Kingman, Arizona has found out: "Probably the most consistent thing is losing."

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