Swiss National Bank
They’re Coming to Take Away Your Cash
Submitted by Gold Standard Institute on 06/16/2015 01:50 -0500Neither control for its own sake, nor bail-ins, are the primary drivers of going cashless. It's something more serious than power or loot.
The Week Ahead: FOMC, Currency Wars, Greece and More
Submitted by Marc To Market on 06/14/2015 09:26 -0500The key events on tap for next week.
How Could the Fed Protect Us from Economic Waves?
Submitted by Gold Standard Institute on 06/10/2015 01:04 -0500W're told that the Federal Reserve protects us from economic waves, indeed from the business cycle itself. The basic idea is that the Fed has both the power and the knowledge to somehow deliver an economic miracle.
Drivers in the Week Ahead
Submitted by Marc To Market on 06/07/2015 12:36 -0500- Australia
- Auto Sales
- Capital Markets
- China
- Consumer Prices
- CPI
- Creditors
- default
- Equity Markets
- Eurozone
- Federal Reserve
- Futures market
- Greece
- Japan
- LIBOR
- Mexico
- Monetary Policy
- New Zealand
- Nikkei
- Norges Bank
- Norway
- Real Interest Rates
- recovery
- Swiss Franc
- Swiss National Bank
- Turkey
- Volatility
- Yen
- Yuan
Why has the dollar jumped in recent weeks? Global conspriacy and lies? Are thousands of investors and participants being deluded?
The Definition Of An Unfree Market
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/03/2015 19:47 -0500"Only if the economy is powered by the marginal borrower who will no longer borrow after a 0.25% hike, does it make sense to believe a hike will derail the economy. Comparisons to 1937, where a hike pushed the US into recession, are incomparable and groundless. On the other hand, maybe the FOMC is worried that the ‘no free lunch’ concept makes them suspicious of the possibility of a meaningfully deleterious market reaction which could have a negative impact on the broader economy. However, under this logic, delaying a hike would only exacerbate such a response."
QE forever and ever and ever and ever............
Submitted by dazzak on 06/01/2015 15:24 -0500Will global QE carry on forever...the next month may give out some clues..will it be Junemaggedon after we had May-hem??
Are Hedge Funds Worth More Than Kindergartens?
Submitted by Gold Standard Institute on 05/27/2015 03:01 -0500"The top 25 hedge fund managers made more than all the kindergarten teachers in the country," declared President Obama. One side supports him, and the other defends hedgies. Both get it partially right.
Is Switzerland The Ultimate Safe Haven For Liberty And Wealth?
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/21/2015 01:00 -0500“You can’t stop an idea whose time has come.”
ECB Blames Leak To Hedge Funds On "Internal Procedural Error"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/19/2015 09:02 -0500Shortly after 6pm London time yesterday, The ECB's Benoit Coeure told a non-public audience of hedge funds in London that "the central bank would moderately front-load its purchases in its quantitative easing program because of the seasonal lack of market liquidity in the summer." The reaction was a 50 pips drop in EURUSD... but this was inside information was not released to the trading public until around 8am London time - and resulted in a 150 pip plunge. In other words, a select private group of head funds in London were leaked ECB front-loading news 14 hours before The ECB deemed it 'correct' to publicly release the comments... due to what The ECB calls "an internal procedure error."
This Is What A $240/Share AAPL Would Look Like In Context
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/18/2015 11:26 -0500If Carl Icahn, whose $6.8 billion in AAPL holdings makes him nearly a 6x bigger holder of the stock than the Swiss National Bank, is correct and AAPL is truly worth $240/share today, or about $1.4 trillion, roughly equivalent to 9% of US GDP, then this is how AAPL would rank if it were a sovereign nation...
Falling Yield, Rising Asset
Submitted by Gold Standard Institute on 05/18/2015 00:58 -0500There's little interest, forcing retirees to spend down their principal. It's no accident, as Keynes called for the “euthanasia of the rentier.” Fed Chair Yellen is a New Keynesian.
How China Covered The World In "Liquidity Swap Lines"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/17/2015 18:45 -0500Central bank liquidity lines like those the Fed used to bailout the world seven years ago have become a fixture of the post crisis financial system. Since 2009, China has essentially blanketed the globe with yuan liquidity lines, inking swap agreements with nearly three dozen countries with the primary goal of increasing the degree to which the renminbi is used in international trade.
The Secret Fed Paper That Advocated a "Carry Tax" on All Physical Cash
Submitted by Phoenix Capital Research on 05/16/2015 16:44 -0500It would be easy to scoff at these proposals as completely insane if the Fed hadn’t published a paper back in 1999 suggesting the implementation of a “carry tax” or taxing actual physical cash using an expiration date if depositors aren’t willing to spend the money.
A Portrait Of The Classical Gold Standard
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/11/2015 20:25 -0500"It was, at least in theory, simple enough in the old days," wrote a wistful W. Randolph Burgess, head of the New York Federal Reserve, in 1938. "In the present strange new world, where the old gold portents have lost their former meaning, where is the radio beam which the central banker may follow? What is the equivalent of gold?" The men of his era and of the late nineteenth century understood the meaning of such a question and, more importantly, why it is one that must be asked. But theirs was a different world, indeed — one without "QE," ZIRP," or "Unknown Knowns" as fiscal policy. And there were no helicopters, either.
Russell Napier Explains What's In Store For Gold If Cash Is Outlawed
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/09/2015 18:45 -0500"If banknotes are outlawed you will be forced to hold money that is a liability of a commercial bank (deposits) and refused access to money that is the liability of the central bank (bank notes)... In such a world, zero-yielding gold would be a high-yielding instrument. If the authorities ever sought to restrict access to banknotes, then gold would suddenly find itself enfranchised as money for the first time in many decades. So, given the scale of these competing forces, it is just too early to say what might happen to the gold price, but the allure of gold will grow the more it becomes clear that central bank fiat has failed and the age of government fiat is dawning."






