Money Supply
Second Largest US Pension Fund To Sell 12% Of Stocks Holdings In Advance Of "Another Downturn"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/02/2015 16:49 -0500While many continue to debate if what with every passing day increasingly looks like a global recession, one from which the US will not decouple no matter how many "virtual portfolio" asset managers claim the contrary, there are those who without much fanfare are already taking proactive steps to avoid the kind of fallout that the markets have hinted in the past month of trading, is inevitable. Some such as Calstrs: the nation's second largest pension fund with $191 billion in assets (smaller only than Calpers), which as the WSJ reports is "considering a significant shift away from some stocks and bonds amid turbulent markets world-wide." According to the WSJ, it will move as much as $20 billion, or 12% of the fund’s stock portfolio, into other assets, including Treasurys.
80 Year Old Woman Trampled To Death In Venezuela Supermarket Stampede
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/30/2015 20:55 -0500With 30% of Venzuelans eating two or fewer meals per day, social unrest is mounting rapidly in President Nicolas Maduro's socialist utopia. As WSJ reports, soldiers have now been deployed to stem rampant food smuggling and price speculation, which Maduro blames for triple-digit inflation and scarcity. "Due to the shortage of food... the desperation is enormous," local opposition politician Andres Camejo said, and nowhere is that more evident than the trampling death of an 80-year-old woman outside a state-subsidized supermarket.
Why Devaluing The Yuan Won't Help China's Economy
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/30/2015 20:00 -0500The economic slowdown in China was set in motion a long time ago when the yearly rate of growth of the money supply fell from 39.3 percent in January 2010 to 1.8 percent by April 2012. The effect of this massive decline in the growth momentum of money puts severe pressure on bubble activities and in turn on various key economic activity data. Any tampering with the currency rate of exchange can only make things much worse as far as the allocation of scarce resources is concerned.
Why The Recurring Economic Crises?
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/28/2015 20:30 -0500...as soon as credit expansion stops, the piper must be paid, and the inevitable readjustments must liquidate the unsound overinvestments of the boom and redirect the economy. And, of course, the longer the boom is kept going, the greater the malinvestments that must be liquidated, and the more harrowing the readjustments that must be made.
Fed Kocherlakota: 2015 Rate Rise Not Appropriate, Open To More Stimulus
Submitted by Pivotfarm on 08/28/2015 14:57 -0500News That Matters
Demand Surge and Shortages of Bullion as Stocks Fall Sharply
Submitted by GoldCore on 08/28/2015 09:27 -0500Demand Surge and Shortages of Bullion as Stocks Fall Sharply, Gold Outperforms All Assets In August
The Stock Market After The Mini Crash
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/27/2015 07:20 -0500Crash waves are notoriously volatile – several of the biggest one day rallies in history have occurred before and during crash waves. This makes short term forecasting even more of a coin flip than it normally is. However, we believe it is important not to lose sight of the forest for the trees; stock markets around the world have been in bubbles driven by extremely loose monetary policy, which ipso facto allows us to identify them as an example of artificial price distortion. Such bubbles always collapse sooner or later – unless the monetary authority decides to simply destroy the currency it issues, as has happened in Zimbabwe and is currently happening in countries like Venezuela and to a slightly lesser extent Argentina. We don’t expect the central banks of the developed nations to follow suit, at least not yet.
Aggressive Chinese Intervention Prevents Another Rout, Sends Stocks Soaring 5% In Last Trading Hour; US Futures Jump
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/27/2015 05:48 -0500- Australia
- Belgium
- Bond
- Central Banks
- China
- Continuing Claims
- Copper
- Creditors
- Crude
- Crude Oil
- default
- Greece
- High Yield
- Initial Jobless Claims
- Insurance Companies
- Japan
- Jim Reid
- Money Supply
- NASDAQ
- Natural Gas
- Nikkei
- Personal Consumption
- Portugal
- Price Action
- Real estate
- Reuters
- Shenzhen
- Switzerland
- Ukraine
- Volatility
- Yuan
After a 5 day tumbling streak, which saw Chinese stock plunge well over 20% and 17% in just the first three days of this week, overnight the Shanghai Composite was hanging by a thread (and threat) until the last hour of trading. In fact, this is what the SHCOMP looked like until the very end: Up 2.6%, up 1.2%, up 2.8%, up 0.6%, up 2%... down 0.2%. And then the cavalry came in: "Heavyweight stocks like banks and insurance companies helped pull up the index, and it’s possibly China Securities Finance entering the market again to shore up stocks," Central China Sec. strategist Zhang Gang told Bloomberg by phone. Net result: the Composite, having been red just shortly before the close, soared higher by 156 points or 5.4%, showing the US stock market just how it's down.
1929 And Its Aftermath - A Contra-Keynesian View Of What Really Happened
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/25/2015 17:45 -0500- Bank of England
- Bank of New York
- British Pound
- Central Banks
- ETC
- Federal Reserve
- Federal Reserve Bank
- Federal Reserve Bank of New York
- Fisher
- fixed
- France
- Germany
- Great Depression
- Keynesian economics
- keynesianism
- Laissez-Faire Capitalism
- Mises Institute
- Money Supply
- Nationalization
- Purchasing Power
- Real estate
- Recession
- recovery
- Unemployment
- White House
A half-century ago, America - and then the world - was rocked by a mighty stock-market crash that soon turned into the steepest and longest-lasting depression of all time. Those who ignore the lessons of history are doomed to repeat it - except that now, with gold abandoned and each nation able to print currency ad lib, we are likely to wind up, not with a repeat of 1929, but with something far worse...
Paul Craig Roberts: Central Banks Have Become A Corrupting Force
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/24/2015 20:10 -0500As asset bubbles are in the way of the Fed’s policy, a decline in stock prices removes the equity market bubble and enables the Fed to print more money and start the process up again. On the other hand, the stock market decline could indicate that the players in the market have comprehended that the stock market is an artificially inflated bubble that has no real basis. Once the psychology is destroyed, flight sets in.
Why Government Hates Cash
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/24/2015 19:10 -0500The reason given by our rulers for suppressing cash is to keep society safe from terrorists, tax evaders, money launderers, drug cartels, and other villains real or imagined. The actual aim of the ?ood of laws restricting or even prohibiting the use of cash is to force the public to make payments through the financial system. This enables governments to expand their ability to spy on and keep track of their citizens’ most private financial dealings, in order to milk their citizens of every last dollar of tax payments that they claim are due.
In Hasty Judgments and Exaggerations Lie Investment Opportunities
Submitted by Marc To Market on 08/23/2015 09:16 -0500A non-bombastic discussion of market forces and what to expect next
The Stock Market Is In Trouble – How Bad Can It Get?
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/21/2015 14:16 -0500Even if it is short term oversold, this is actually a quite dangerous market – caveat emptor, as they say.
10 Things Every Economist Should Know About The Gold Standard
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/19/2015 21:45 -0500- B+
- Bank Failures
- Bank of England
- Ben Bernanke
- Ben Bernanke
- BIS
- Borrowing Costs
- Central Banks
- Christina Romer
- CPI
- Fare Share
- Federal Reserve
- fixed
- Gold Bugs
- Great Depression
- Krugman
- Milton Friedman
- Monetary Base
- Monetary Policy
- Money Supply
- Newspaper
- None
- Paul Krugman
- Precious Metals
- Purchasing Power
- Switzerland
- The Economist
- Unemployment
At the risk of sounding like a broken record we'd like to say a bit more about economists' tendency to get their monetary history wrong; in particular, the common myths about the gold standard. If there's one monetary history topic that tends to get handled especially sloppily by monetary economists, not to mention other sorts, this is it. Sure, the gold standard was hardly perfect, and gold bugs themselves sometimes make silly claims about their favorite former monetary standard. But these things don't excuse the errors many economists commit in their eagerness to find fault with that "barbarous relic." The point, in other words, isn't to make a pitch for gold. It's to make a pitch for something - anything - that's better than our present, lousy money.






