B+
The Changing World of Work 3: "Full-Stack" Skills
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 04/15/2015 08:44 -0500
Inventor of Antivirus Sofware: The Government Is Planting Malicious Software On Your Phone So It Can See What You're Doing
Submitted by George Washington on 04/14/2015 21:12 -0500McAfee:
“Encryption Doesn’t Matter In a World Where Anyone Can Plant Software On Your Phone and See What You’re Seeing”
Chaos And Hegemony - How US Dollar Imperialism Dominates The World
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 04/14/2015 18:30 -0500- Afghanistan
- B+
- Barack Obama
- Brazil
- BRICs
- China
- Councils
- European Union
- Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation
- Germany
- Global Economy
- Gross Domestic Product
- India
- Iran
- Iraq
- Janet Yellen
- Japan
- Middle East
- Monetary Base
- National Debt
- Purchasing Power
- Reality
- Renminbi
- Reserve Currency
- Saudi Arabia
- Sovereign Debt
- Trade Balance
- Trade Deficit
- World Trade
To maintain its hegemony, the U.S. must by all means prevent the emergence of rival powers and impede possible current as well as future threats that could emanate from oil states. The ideal condition for enforcing its own goals at a low cost would be the fragmentation of antagonistic power centers through ethnic and religious strife, civil wars, chaos and deep-seated mistrust in the Middle East – always following the well-known premise of ‘divide and rule.’ In fact, we are currently experiencing tremendous changes towards such a chaotic state of affairs.
Futures Slump As Asian Stock Bubble Calls A Timeout
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 04/14/2015 05:59 -0500- B+
- Bank Lending Survey
- Bond
- China
- Consumer Prices
- Copper
- Core CPI
- CPI
- Creditors
- Crude
- Crude Oil
- default
- Germany
- Greece
- headlines
- Iran
- Iraq
- Italy
- Jim Reid
- Lehman
- Momentum Chasing
- Newspaper
- NFIB
- Nikkei
- Portugal
- Price Action
- Private Equity
- Real estate
- Recession
- recovery
- San Francisco Fed
- Ukraine
- Wells Fargo
Judging by the recent action in equity futures, the continuously rangebound US market since the end of QE may be entering its latest downphase, catalyzed to a big extent by the recent strength in the JPY (the EURJPY traded down to 2 year lows overnight), especially following yesterday's not one but two statements by Abe advisor Harada saying a USDJPY at 125 isn't "justified" and a 105 level would be appropriate. A level, incidentally, which would push the Nikkei lower by about 20% and crush Japanese pensions which are now mostly invested in stocks. Not helping matters was the pause in the Chinese and Hang Seng stock bubbles, with the former barely rising 0.3%, while the former actually seeing its first 1.6% decline after many days of torrid, relentless rises.
The FBI Is Using "Aggressive Deception" To Cover Up Saudi Links To 9/11 Attack
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 04/13/2015 22:15 -0500Former Democratic Sen. Bob Graham, who in 2002 chaired the congressional Joint Inquiry into 9/11, maintains the FBI is covering up a Saudi support cell in Sarasota for the hijackers - “One thing that irritates me is that the F.B.I. has gone beyond just covering up, trying to avoid disclosure, into what I call aggressive deception,” He says the al-Hijjis’ “urgent” pre-9/11 exit suggests “someone may have tipped them off” about the coming attacks. “The 28 pages primarily relate to who financed 9/11, and they point a very strong finger at Saudi Arabia as being the principal financier,” he said, adding, “I am speaking of the kingdom,” or government, of Saudi Arabia, not just wealthy individual Saudi donors.
What's Really Behind The U.S Crude Oil Build
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 04/13/2015 13:33 -0500In recent weeks the sell side analysts who cover energy have become so complacent that they merely plug in the current strip prices into their earnings models for E&P companies. Not one, except Mike Rothman at Cornerstone Analytics, is questioning the “why?” or “how?” of what is occurring. The 200 or so players who effectively control the oil futures market have changed behavior and expectations as the oil price curve has collapsed. Prices from late 2016 into 2018 are essentially flat in the low to mid 60s, believe it or not, which would essentially bankrupt most of OPEC, US conventional oil, part of US shale and deep offshore drilling. So ask where is the oil going to come from? Yet the madness continues until investors realize E&P companies need a higher price to justify investments in the space.
Meet The Secretive Group That Runs The World
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 04/12/2015 22:03 -0500- B+
- Bank of England
- Bank of International Settlements
- Bank of New York
- Belgium
- Ben Bernanke
- Ben Bernanke
- BIS
- Brazil
- Central Banks
- China
- Corruption
- Estonia
- European Central Bank
- Federal Reserve
- Fisher
- France
- Germany
- Global Economy
- Greece
- Gross Domestic Product
- Hong Kong
- Housekeeping
- Hungary
- India
- International Monetary Fund
- Israel
- Italy
- Kazakhstan
- Latvia
- Lithuania
- Mervyn King
- Mexico
- Monetary Policy
- New York Times
- New Zealand
- Newspaper
- None
- Paul Volcker
- Poland
- Reality
- Recession
- Saudi Arabia
- Slovakia
- Switzerland
- The Economist
- Transparency
- Trichet
- Turkey
- Unemployment
- World Bank
Stan Druckenmiller's "Horrific Sense" Of Deja Vu: "I Know It's Tempting To Invest, But This Will End Very Badly"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 04/12/2015 18:45 -0500“I just have the same horrific sense I had" before, Druckenmiller said to an audience at the Lost Tree Club in North Palm Beach, Florida (according to a transcript obtained by Bloomberg). "Our monetary policy is so much more reckless and so much more aggressively pushing the people in this room and everybody else out the risk curve that we’re doubling down on the same policy that really put us there."
Draghi Is No Longer Bernanke's Best Friend (Or The End Of The Mainstream Theory Of QE)
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 04/11/2015 10:40 -0500What a wonderful and perfectly representative dichotomy of where monetarism stands. We have Bernanke - the former, massive practitioner of QE - telling the world how it does nothing much; while at the exact same time Draghi - the latest - tells the world its super-healing and supporting properties. What’s reconcilable about those two positions is simply asset bubbles, as they are what stand against the former and remain the only, dim hope of the latter.
Harper’s Folly: Canada Losing $30+ Billion/Year on Tar-Sands Oil
Submitted by Sprott Money on 04/10/2015 03:58 -0500Oil is our most-precious commodity as fuel for the global economy. It is also becoming a scarce commodity, as global production has flattened, while global demand continues to climb relentlessly, everywhere in the world except for the dying economies of Europe and North America. It is a classic “seller’s market.”
Spelling Out The Big Reset
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 04/09/2015 20:50 -0500Wiping out creditors by inflation is the easy part. Re-establishing money to restart the world economy is the harder one.
US Dollar Surge Returns, Pushes Equity Futures Lower
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 04/09/2015 06:02 -0500- Across the Curve
- B+
- BOE
- Bond
- China
- Continuing Claims
- Copper
- Crude
- Crude Oil
- Equity Markets
- Eurozone
- Fisher
- fixed
- France
- Germany
- Gilts
- Greece
- Hong Kong
- Initial Jobless Claims
- Iran
- Italy
- Jim Reid
- Mexico
- Nikkei
- non-performing loans
- Precious Metals
- Price Action
- recovery
- Switzerland
- Wholesale Inventories
- Yuan
As noted several hours ago, the main story overnight is not that Greece once again narrowly averted a Grexit when it was reported it would make its scheduled payment to the IMF today (adding that next month is a "different story") a development that was met with yet another ultimatum by its "partner", the Eurozone, but the dot com bubble deja vu-esque move in Hong Kong stocks, where the Chinese, seemingly tired of pushing up their local market into the stratosphere have turned their attention southward and are desperate to buy up every single Hong Kong stock.
The Shell-BG Megadeal: All You Need To Know, And Why The Initial Response Is Not Enthusiastic
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 04/08/2015 08:33 -0500The full breakdown of the biggest energy deal in the past decade and the 14th largest ever corporate takeover.
Futures Flat On Minutes Day; Chinese Bubble Spills Into Hong Kong; Biggest Energy M&A Deal In Over A Decade
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 04/08/2015 06:00 -0500While US equity futures are largely unchanged, if only ahead of the now daily pre-open market-wide ramp, things in Asia have continued on their bubbly flurry, where China's Shanghai Composite briefly rose above 4000 for the first time since 2008, but it was the surge in the Hong Kong stock market that showed the Chinese bubble is finally spilling over, in the form of a blistering rally on the Hang Seng which rose nearly 4% on immense volume which at 250 billion Hong Kong dollars ($32 billion) was three times the average daily volume over the past year and nearly 20% more than the previous record volume day in October 2007, at the height of the pre-financial crisis bubble.
The Most Whiney, Thin-Skinned, Easily Offended Society In The History Of The World
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 04/07/2015 23:39 -0500Sorry... but it's your fault you're offended all the time.





