Real estate
First I set CNBC on F.I.R.E., Now It Appears I've Set Sell Side Wall Street on F.I.R.E. As Well!!!
Submitted by Reggie Middleton on 01/06/2012 08:22 -0500We dont' need any water, let the mo@#$#%ker burn!
Three Long Waves
Submitted by Bruce Krasting on 01/05/2012 21:47 -0500These are not mega trends, but they will prove to be important.
Bonanzas Don't End Well
Submitted by South of Wall Street on 01/05/2012 18:45 -0500The Shale Bonanza has the setup for implosion
Guest Post: Want to Put Iran Out of Business? Here's How
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/05/2012 14:30 -0500Those attempting to pressure Iran by increasing "tensions" and thus the price of oil have it precisely backwards. The one sure way to fatally destabilize the Iranian theocracy is to adjust the demand and supply of oil so the price plummets (as it did in December 2008) to $25/barrel, and stays there for at least six months. It has been estimated that the Iranian theocracy cannot fund its bloated bureaucracies, military and its welfare state if oil falls below around $40-$45/barrel. Drop oil to $25/barrel and keep it there, and the Iranian regime will implode, along with the Chavez regime in Venezuela. Saber-rattling actually aids the Iranian regime by artificially injecting a "disruptive war" premium into the price of oil: they can make the same profits from fewer barrels of oil. The way to put them out of business is drop the price of oil and restrict their sales by whatever means are available. They will be selling fewer barrels and getting less than production costs for those barrels. With no income, the regime will face the wrath of a people who have become dependent on the State for their sustenance and subsidized fuel. How do you drop oil to $25/barrel? Easy: stop saber-rattling in the mideast and engineer a massive global recession with a side order of low-level trade war. Though you wouldn't know it from the high price of oil, the world is awash in oil; storage facilities are full, and production has actually increased a bit in North America.
Doug Casey Addresses Getting Out of Dodge
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/04/2012 19:08 -0500The fact is that the US has been on a slippery slope for decades, and it's about to go over a cliff. However, our standard of living, while declining, is still very high, both relatively and absolutely. But an American can enjoy a much higher standard of living abroad. On the other hand, if I were some poor guy in a poverty-wracked country with few opportunities, I'd want to go where the action is, where the money is, now. Today, that means trying to get into the United States. The US is headed the wrong direction, but it's still a land of opportunity and a whole lot better than some flea-bitten village in Niger...This is one of the advantages of studying history, because it shows you that things like this rarely happen overnight. They are usually the result of trends that build over years and years, sometimes over generations. In the case of the US, I think the trend has been downhill, in many ways, for many years. Pick a time. You could make an argument, from a moral point of view, that things started heading downhill at the time of the Spanish-American War. That was when a previously peaceful and open country first started conquering overseas lands and staking colonies. America was still in the ascent towards its peak economically, but the seeds of its own demise were already sewn, and a libertarian watching the scene might have concluded that it was time to get out of Dodge –
Reggie Middleton Sets CNBC on F.I.R.E.!!!
Submitted by Reggie Middleton on 01/04/2012 12:12 -0500Have we set the MSM on FIRE! Let's see if a trend was created. 18 hours after warning on the insurance sector, record losses were announced!!!
Tick By Tick Research Email - Is Idiosyncracy the New Norm?
Submitted by Tick By Tick on 01/04/2012 02:15 -0500Is idiosyncracy the substitute for a fledgling Sovereign Bond Market? Including our recommendations for 2012
Updating Smithers: Continued Caution for Stock Bulls
Submitted by Econophile on 01/03/2012 15:02 -0500Writing as someone who was strongly stock-oriented for most of a long investing career, I can assert that at today's low dividend yields, it is difficult to see stocks as strong trees on which to rely. The Smithers parameters provide cautionary evidence for the bulls who point to current "low" price-earnings ratios and "sunny skies almost forever" views of corporate profits and predict stock market returns well above bond yields for years to come.
Reggie Middleton on CNBC StreetSigns Sees 2012 As Reluctant/Manipulated Continuation of Q1 2009
Submitted by Reggie Middleton on 01/03/2012 07:42 -0500The iconoclastic outcast being called in to shake things up a little. I'll appear on CNBC @2:30 with my outlook for 2012. I'm not shy about my track record & here's what I'll have to say.
30 Statistics That Show That The Middle Class Is Dying Right In Front Of Our Eyes As We Enter 2012
Submitted by ilene on 01/02/2012 22:13 -0500Once upon a time,...
Presenting 2011's Top 10 Most Corrupt American Politicians
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/02/2012 21:25 -0500- AFL-CIO
- Barack Obama
- Barney Frank
- Ben Bernanke
- Ben Bernanke
- Boeing
- Corruption
- Cronyism
- default
- Department of Justice
- Dreamliner
- FBI
- Federal Reserve
- Florida
- FOIA
- Freedom of Information Act
- Global Economy
- Hank Paulson
- Hank Paulson
- House Financial Services Committee
- Illinois
- Insider Trading
- Judicial Watch
- Maxine Waters
- Meltdown
- Nancy Pelosi
- New York Times
- None
- Obama Administration
- Obamacare
- President Obama
- Real estate
- South Carolina
- Spencer Bachus
- TARP
- Testimony
- Transparency
- Treasury Department
- Wall Street Journal
- Washington D.C.
- White House
When it comes to corruption, cronyism and general muppetry in Washington D.C., the only real question is 'where does one start?' Yet one has to start somewhere to conclude with a list of the ten most corrupt and despicable marionettes in D.C. Which is precisely what JudicialWatch has done in its annual compilation of the "Top 10 Most Corrupt Politicians in Washington D.C." for 2011. And confirming what everyone knows, that both the left and right are merely irrelevant names for the same general social affliction, or should we call it by its true name - wealth pillage - the split is even between democrats and republicans. In no particular order, the winners of 2011 are...
Follow the money No. 99 | In pursuit of the elusive soft-landing
Submitted by rcwhalen on 01/02/2012 08:27 -0500The new year’s worldwide economic downturn has an interlocking effect: every national economy is searching to accommodate itself politically as well as economically to what looks to be an extended period of low growth. After longer or shorter periods of historically unrivaled prosperity, they are feeling for a “bottom” – a level to wait out new growth. That is the proverbial “soft landing”.
The Greatest Risk To Retail Commercial Real Estate Is? Sovereign Debt! Macro Headwinds! Popping Bubbles! Busted Banks! No, It's
Submitted by Reggie Middleton on 12/21/2011 05:34 -0500The fact of the matter is that there is a very fundamental, and sparsely recognized reason for overbuilt retail commercial real estate to take a tumble - in addition to the more recognized massive headwinds.
Major Real Estate Collapse In Europe? I've Found The EU Equivalent Of GGP, The Largest Real Estate Failure In US History
Submitted by Reggie Middleton on 12/19/2011 11:22 -0500Many don't understand how connected the financial fates of the US and the EU actually are. Those that don't have another think coming.
Guest Post: China's Real Estate Collapse
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/16/2011 15:01 -0500As I listen to all types of perma-bull talk about how the S&P would be at 1400 if it wasn't for Europe (which is the equivalent of: if my wife was 100 pounds lighter... she'd be a supermodel), I can't help but pulling my hair out. The situation in Europe is clearly bad, and after reading Michael Lewis' new book... appears almost impossible to be resolved without massive defaults. However, the other domino in the equation is the Chinese real estate market. The 'global growth engine', China, is running out of steam. Their policy of placing market orders on anything and everything to inflate stimulate the economy - surprise, surprise - is proving to be unsustainable.








