Borrowing Costs

Phoenix Capital Research's picture

Graham Summers’ Weekly Market Forecast (Nothing’s Changed Edition)





Against this highly deflationary backdrop, the one primary prop for the markets is hope of more juice/credit from the world Central Banks. However, even that prop is losing its strength: the gains of the last coordinated Central Bank intervention lasted just a few weeks.

 
Tyler Durden's picture

Guest Post: 2012 - The Year Of Living Dangerously





We have now entered the fifth year of this Fourth Turning Crisis. George Washington and his troops were barely holding on at Valley Forge during the fifth year of the American Revolution Fourth Turning. By year five of the Civil War Fourth Turning 700,000 Americans were dead, the South left in ruins, a President assassinated and a military victory attained that felt like defeat. By the fifth year of the Great Depression/World War II Fourth Turning, FDR’s New Deal was in place and Adolf Hitler had been democratically elected and was formulating big plans for his Third Reich. The insight from prior Fourth Turnings that applies to 2012 is that things will not improve. They call it a Crisis because the risk of calamity is constant. There is zero percent chance that 2012 will result in a recovery and return to normalcy. Not one of the issues that caused our economic collapse has been solved. The “solutions” implemented since 2008 have exacerbated the problems of debt, civic decay and global disorder. The choices we make as a nation in 2012 will determine the future course of this Fourth Turning. If we fail in our duty, this Fourth Turning could go catastrophically wrong. I pray we choose wisely. Have a great 2012.

 
Phoenix Capital Research's picture

2012 Will Mark the End of the Euro






European nations need to roll over hundreds of billions if not trillions of Euros’ worth of debt in 2012. And this is at a time when even more solvent members such as France and Germany are staging weak and failed auctions.

 
Tyler Durden's picture

Frontrunning: January 5





  • ECB Cash Averts ‘Funding Crisis’ for Italy, Spain (Bloomberg)
  • Bailout talks in Greece ‘crucial’, Premier says (WSJ)
  • Spain sees €50bn of new bank provisions (FT)
  • Fed says expand Fannie, Freddie role to aid housing (Reuters)
  • France’s Borrowing Costs Rise at Bond Sale (Bloomberg)
  • Europe worries linger after French auction (Reuters)
  • PBOC Suspends Bill Sale as Money Rates Rise Before Holiday (Bloomberg)
  • Turkey warns against Shi'ite-Sunni Cold War (Reuters)
  • New capital rules for banks ‘delayed to 2H’(China Daily)
 
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