Housing Prices
Shadow Over Asia
Submitted by Vitaliy Katsenelson on 10/07/2015 11:23 -0500- Australia
- Borrowing Costs
- Brazil
- China
- Commercial Real Estate
- Copper
- Corruption
- Demographics
- ETC
- European Union
- fixed
- Germany
- Global Economy
- Great Depression
- Housing Prices
- Hyperinflation
- Japan
- Market Share
- Ordos
- Purchasing Power
- Real estate
- Recession
- Renminbi
- Savings Rate
- Transparency
- Value Investing
- Wall Street Journal
- Yen
Having government control over the levers of the economy can have advantages. For example, by taking prompt action, the Chinese government was able to pull the economy out of the recession remarkably fast, basically by fire-housing the stimulus package that was equivalent to 12% GDP. That’s the advantage. The only problem is that these kinds of short-term advantages come with long-term, painful consequences.
And Scene: Ben Bernanke Says More People Should Have Gone To Jail For Causing The Great Recession
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/04/2015 20:16 -0500- AIG
- Bear Stearns
- Ben Bernanke
- Ben Bernanke
- Commercial Paper
- Demographics
- Department of Justice
- Fannie Mae
- Federal Reserve
- Foreign Policy magazine
- Freddie Mac
- House Financial Services Committee
- Housing Bubble
- Housing Market
- Housing Prices
- Joint Economic Committee
- Keynesian economics
- Main Street
- Monetary Policy
- New York Times
- Recession
- Regional Banks
- Subprime Mortgages
- TARP
- Testimony
- Unemployment
- Washington D.C.
Q. Should somebody have gone to jail.
Bernanke: Yeah, yeah I think so. It would have been my preference to have more investigation of individual actions as obviously everything that went wrong, or was illegal, was done by some individial not by an abstract firm.
Austrian Economics, Monetary Freedom, & America's Economic Roller-Coaster
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/18/2015 19:05 -0500- Ben Bernanke
- Ben Bernanke
- Capital Formation
- Census Bureau
- Central Banks
- Excess Reserves
- Fannie Mae
- Federal Reserve
- Freddie Mac
- Great Depression
- Henry Paulson
- Housing Market
- Housing Prices
- John Maynard Keynes
- Keynesian economics
- Ludwig von Mises
- Maynard Keynes
- Milton Friedman
- Monetary Base
- Monetary Policy
- Mortgage Loans
- Nationalism
- None
- Quantitative Easing
- Real Interest Rates
- Recession
- recovery
- Unemployment
- Washington D.C.
It is time for a radical denationalization of money, a privatization of the monetary and banking system through a separation of government from money and all forms of financial intermediation. That is the pathway to ending the cycles of booms and busts, and creating the market-based institutional framework for sustainable economic growth and betterment. It is time for monetary freedom to replace the out-of-date belief in government monetary central planning.
Fed Hike - Now Or Never
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/11/2015 09:25 -0500While Fisher, among others, believes that the recent fall in inflation is solely due to collapsing energy and crop prices, the issue of weakening economic data on a global scale, particularly that of China, may suggest much less transient nature. As we stated previously, we think the Fed realizes that we are likely closer to the next recession than not. While raising interest rates may accelerate the pace to the next recession, it is better than being caught with rates at zero when it does occur.
The Great Wall Of Money
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/27/2015 20:00 -0500Since the GFC, 'The Great Wall of Money' that Bretton Woods II has furnished via its vendor-financing relationship, has masked the deleveraging of our world economy. The Great Wall is about to collapse and fall.
Frontrunning: August 19
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/19/2015 06:46 -0500- $1 trillion in Emerging Market outflows in the past 13 months (FT)
- German lawmakers back third Greek bailout (Reuters)
- Dutch government faces test in "junkie" Greece debate (Reuters)
- China c.bank offers selected banks medium term lending facility (Reuters)
- Another "expert network" busted: Promontory settles over StanChart probe (FT)
- Angola to Ship Most Crude in Four Years to Meet Asian Demand (BBG)
- Hackers dump data online from cheating website Ashley Madison (Reuters)
- Yuan’s Devaluation Brings Losses for Some (WSJ)
U.S. Wages Have Fallen EVERY Quarter of the 'Recovery'
Submitted by Sprott Money on 08/12/2015 04:57 -0500For 6 ½ long years, we have been bombarded with the mythology known as “the U.S. economic recovery” by the mainstream media.
Greece's Collapse Was a Reversion to the Mean… Who's Next?
Submitted by Phoenix Capital Research on 08/08/2015 15:45 -0500In simple terms, Greece from 2003-2010 was an economic boom driven by incomes, which were in turn driven by cheap debt NOT real organic growth. Thus, the collapse in GDP was yet another case of “price discovery” in which asset prices fall to economic realities…
"This Is The Largest Financial Departure From Reality In Human History"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/03/2015 16:30 -0500- 8.5%
- Aussie
- Australia
- Bank of England
- Bear Market
- Bond
- Borrowing Costs
- Brazil
- Capital Formation
- Capital Markets
- Carry Trade
- Central Banks
- China
- Consumer Prices
- Copper
- Corruption
- Crude
- Crude Oil
- default
- Enron
- ETC
- Fail
- Federal Reserve
- Fitch
- fixed
- Flight to Safety
- Fractional Reserve Banking
- Global Economy
- Greece
- Gross Domestic Product
- headlines
- Hong Kong
- Housing Prices
- India
- Insurance Companies
- Japan
- Lehman
- Lehman Brothers
- McKinsey
- MF Global
- Milton Friedman
- Momentum Chasing
- Money Supply
- New Zealand
- Nomura
- None
- Precious Metals
- Private Equity
- Purchasing Power
- ratings
- Real estate
- Real Interest Rates
- Reality
- Recession
- recovery
- Reserve Currency
- Reuters
- Risk Premium
- Saudi Arabia
- Shadow Banking
- Sprott Asset Management
- Ukraine
- Volatility
- World Bank
- Yuan
We have lived through a credit hyper-expansion for the record books, with an unprecedented generation of excess claims to underlying real wealth. In doing so we have created the largest financial departure from reality in human history. Bubbles are not new – humanity has experienced them periodically going all the way back to antiquity – but the novel aspect of this one, apart from its scale, is its occurrence at a point when we have reached or are reaching so many limits on a global scale. The retrenchment we are about to experience as this bubble bursts is also set to be unprecedented, given that the scale of a bust is predictably proportionate to the scale of the excesses during the boom that precedes it. Deflation and depression are mutually reinforcing, meaning the downward spiral will continue for many years. China is the biggest domino about to fall, and from a great height as well, threatening to flatten everything in its path on the way down. This is the beginning of a New World Disorder…
Fed Admits Economy Can't Function Without Bubbles
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/03/2015 16:00 -0500The Fed would have needed to hike rates by 800 bps in the wake of the dot-com collapse in order to prevent the housing bubble. That would have purged the system and gradually, the FOMC could have eased by around 300 bps over the next four years. That policy course would have prevented the speculative bubble that brought capital markets the world over to their knees in 2008. And why didn’t the Fed do this? Because "such a large increase in interest rates would have depressed output more than the Great Recession did." In other words, thanks to Alan Greenspan, the US economy cannot function under a normalized monetary policy regime.
Rent Bubble = Housing Bubble = Rent Bubble
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/03/2015 10:42 -0500Both bubbles (rents and housing) are vulnerable to popping. The real test of valuation is: what's it worth in a recession, after all the easy money and the jobs that depended on easy money have vanished?
One Economic Datapoint, Two Vastly Different Interpretations
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 07/28/2015 09:31 -0500
Central Banks Ready To Panic - Again
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 07/26/2015 14:00 -0500Less than a decade after a housing/derivatives bubble nearly wiped out the global financial system, a new and much bigger commodities/derivatives bubble is threatening to finish the job. So... the central banks will panic. Again. Countries that retain some control over their monetary systems will see their interest rates fall to zero and beyond, while those that don’t will be thrown into some kind of new age hyperinflationary depression. Not 2008 all over again; this is something much stranger.
The Big, Bad Bear Case
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 07/26/2015 11:08 -0500The purpose of this article is to outline, with facts, large global structural issues that everyone, bulls and bears alike, should be fully aware of. This article will focus on much larger structural issues that have been building for years and decades. And no this article is not so much about central banks, debt issues, Greece, China, deficits, etc. While all these are important as part of the overall picture, they are mere current symptoms of a much larger issue that is at the core of all that is already in play and will only deepen in our societies in the decades to come.
How Janet Yellen Is Orchestrating Her Own 'Big Crisis' Moment
Submitted by Secular Investor on 07/25/2015 16:22 -0500And how you will be paying for her 'exit party' bill...






