Fail
The End Of Keynesian Orthodoxy
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/02/2015 17:00 -0500The resistance to such an awakening is understandable if still lamentable. If recession is truly the looming assurance, as it increasingly appears, that would mean not just the end of the recovery but the end of “accommodation” as a given force. In other words, Janet Yellen and the OECD start backwards from their endpoint because of their unshakable faith in monetarism, a faith that actually defines how they think an economy does work (and how they produce the core assumptions in their models); should that path from here to there completely unravel, so, too, does their assumed power and philosophy.
The Shocking True State of the Financial System Today
Submitted by Phoenix Capital Research on 12/02/2015 15:44 -0500The global Central Banks have literally bet the financial system that their theories will work. They haven’t. All they’ve done is set the stage for an even worse crisis in which entire countries will go bankrupt.
"Buy The Dips! What Could Possibly Go Wrong?" Axel Merk Warns "A Hell Of A Lot"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/02/2015 12:09 -0500- Australian Dollar
- B+
- Bear Market
- Central Banks
- China
- Commitment of Traders
- Equity Markets
- Eurozone
- Fail
- Finland
- fixed
- Flight to Safety
- France
- Germany
- Glencore
- High Yield
- Housing Market
- Institutional Investors
- Monetary Policy
- New Zealand
- non-performing loans
- OPEC
- Paul Volcker
- Real Interest Rates
- Stress Test
- Unemployment
- Volatility
- Wall Street Journal
The lack of fear in risky assets is another way of saying that risk premia have been low, or as we also like to put it, that complacency has been high. Not fully appreciative of this inherent risk, it seems many investors have refrained from rebalancing their portfolios, and bought the dips instead. We believe the Fed’s efforts to engineer an exit from its ultra-low monetary policy should get risk premia to rise once again, that if fear should come back to the market, volatility should rise, creating headwinds to ‘risky’ assets, including equities. That said, this isn’t an overnight process, as the ‘buy the dip’ mentality has taken years to be established. Conversely, it may take months, if not years, for investors to shift focus to capital preservation, i.e. to sell into rallies instead.
Turkey Gloats As Europe Threatens Greece With Schengen Expulsion Over Refugee Response
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/02/2015 08:07 -0500The EU is warning Greece it faces suspension from the Schengen passport-free travel zone unless it overhauls its response to the migration crisis by mid-December, as frustration mounts over Athens’ reluctance to accept outside support. Meanwhile non-EU member Turkey gloats as it gets a soon to be embezzled wire transfer of €3.0 billion for its "proactive" refugee response.
Operation Gladio Reborn: The Paris Attacks Have Unleashed A New Wave Of Emergency Laws
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/01/2015 13:38 -0500"... Gladio, amongst others, is just a perfect example of how governments used oppression against their own citizens to shape the mindset of the public to unify them towards a common goal and objective, which in our case is: counter-terrorism. The problem, however, is that by giving this support, the public indirectly relinquishes many freedoms and liberties."
Fractional-Reserve Banking is Pure Fraud, Part II
Submitted by Sprott Money on 12/01/2015 05:27 -0500Even despite the saturation criminality that readers have already seen, many will still argue that we “need” these Big Banks, and that we even “need” fractional-reserve (no reserve) fraud.
Pedro Da Costa Has The Courage To Review Ben Bernanke's Memoir, Finds A Few Gaping Holes
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/30/2015 18:28 -0500- Alan Greenspan
- Bank of International Settlements
- Ben Bernanke
- Ben Bernanke
- BIS
- Bond
- Brazil
- Central Banks
- China
- Citadel
- Comptroller of the Currency
- Fail
- Federal Reserve
- Financial Regulation
- Foreclosures
- Great Depression
- Greece
- Housing Bubble
- Institute For International Economics
- Janet Yellen
- Japan
- Meltdown
- Monetary Policy
- Office of the Comptroller of the Currency
- PIMCO
- Recession
- recovery
- Securities and Exchange Commission
- South Carolina
- Transparency
- Unemployment
It is Pedro's "courage to write" what Bernanke conveniently forgot to add in his memoir, that makes this review so much more memorable than the generic sycophantic tripe written by his "access journalism" peers.
Stocks End November With Nothing Despite Biggest Short-Squeeze In 6 Months
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/30/2015 16:08 -0500When The Narrative Breaks
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/30/2015 13:36 -0500A false capitalism reigns based on false capital - notional wealth where there is really no wealth; value where there is no value. Moments like this in history beat a path straight to currency collapse, and that will open the door to a greater collapse of all our familiar arrangements.
Frontrunning: November 30
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/30/2015 07:27 -0500- Dollar rises versus euro, oil drops before ECB, OPEC meetings (Reuters)
- Smog chokes Chinese, Indian capitals as climate talks begin (Reuters)
- Obama: COP21 Paris Climate Talks Could Be ‘Turning Point’ For Planet (BBG)
- China plans to launch carbon-tracking satellites into space (Reuters)
- Scientists Dispute 2-Degree Model Guiding Climate Talks (WSJ)
- At NATO, Turkey defiant over downing of Russian jet (Reuters)
- ECB Left With No Choice But Action After Draghi's Priming (BBG)
Two Reasons The 'War On Terror' Will Always Fail
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/29/2015 20:30 -0500If we want to get to a world where terrorism isn’t such a regular tragedy, governments need to start recognizing the fact that the so-called “War on Terror” is a self-fulfilling prophecy destined to foment one thing and one thing only: more terrorism.
Inside The ISIS Propaganda Machine: An Up-Close Look At A Militant Media Strategy
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/29/2015 16:30 -0500"It Is All Rather Scary" - Chinese Debt Snowball Gaining Momentum
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/29/2015 13:15 -0500Financial crises can happen quickly, like the bursting of the tech stock bubble in early 2000, or slowly, like the late-1980s junk bond bust. The shape of the crash depends mostly on the asset in question: Equities can plunge literally overnight, while bonds and bank loans can take a while to reach critical mass. China’s bursting bubble is of the second type. "If, as seems likely, the government has succeeded in getting funding to higher risk sectors by relaxing bond approvals," wrote Christopher Wood of brokerage CLSA in a recent note, "it is all rather scary, given the regulatory failures exposed by the A share boom-bust cycle."
Fourth Turning - Social & Cultural Distress Dividing The Nation
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/28/2015 19:15 -0500A simmering rage is bubbling below the surface as 20% of American households rely on food stamps to survive, the percentage of Americans in the labor force stands at a four decade low, real household income remains stagnant at 1988 levels, corporate profits have reached record levels while corporations continue to fire Americans – shipping their jobs overseas, and the six mega-corporations representing the mainstream media cover up the truth, mislead the public with propaganda, while celebrating the .1% as saviors of our economy. There is nothing more volatile to societal stability than millions of unemployed men, growing angry and resentful towards the ruling class for their lot in life.
Why The Obamacare Exchanges Are Failing
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/27/2015 12:25 -0500It's the kind of business plan that would be laughed out of a business school classroom. "The co-ops were essentially amateur exercises." Why not scrap the perverse ACA regulations and admit it was a pipe dream to ever assume young, healthy people could be coerced into paying several times their expected costs to cover other people’s excessive spending.






