Unemployment
It Begins: Barclays Pushes Back Rate Hike Forecast Until 2016, Admits Fed Is "Market Dependent"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/24/2015 11:24 -0500Translation: the Fed is not data dependent, but it is, as we have said all along, entirely market dependent.
They're Gonna Need A Bigger Balance Sheet
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/23/2015 21:00 -0500Anyone who listens to a mainstream media pundit, talking head, or spokes bimbo deserves the reaming they are going to receive.
“There is no means of avoiding the final collapse of a boom brought about by credit expansion. The alternative is only whether the crisis should come sooner as the result of voluntary abandonment of further credit expansion, or later as a final and total catastrophe of the currency system involved.” – Ludwig von Mises
Does Capitalism Cause Poverty?
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/23/2015 16:45 -0500The world’s poorest countries are not characterized by naive trust in capitalism, but by utter distrust, which leads to heavy government intervention and regulation of business. Under such conditions, capitalism does not thrive and economies remain poor. Pope Francis is right to focus attention on the plight of the world’s poorest. Their misery, however, is not the consequence of unbridled capitalism, but of a capitalism that has been bridled in just the wrong way.
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
Making Sense Of The Sudden Market Plunge
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/22/2015 13:56 -0500The eventual outcome to all this is captured brilliantly in this quote by Ludwig Von Mises, the Austrian economist: "There is no means of avoiding the final collapse of a boom brought about by credit expansion. The alternative is only whether the crisis should come sooner as the result of a voluntary abandonment of further credit expansion, or later as a final and total catastrophe of the currency system involved." The credit expansion happened between 1980 and 2008, there was a warning shot which was soundly ignored by ignorant central bankers, and now we have more, not less, debt with which to contend.
Depression Tracker: Unemployment Soars In Latin America's Most Important Economy
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/20/2015 11:40 -0500If there’s anything Brazil certainly does not need, it’s more bad news. The country is, in many ways, a symbol of the great EM unwind and the situation is made immeasurably worse by political instability. The economic outlook - which was already bad enough between a harrowing bout of staglflaton and dual deficits on the fiscal and current accounts - just got a lot worse as unemployment spiked to 7.5%, well ahead of consensus and the worst in five years. How bad is it you ask? Bad enough that BofAML now says the "key" stat to focus on is the number of participants in recurring street protests.
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.
10 Reasons Why The Fed Won't Raise Interest Rates
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/19/2015 13:45 -0500With the confused FOMC still stuck on the fence of raising rates (or not), here are ten reasons why they won't.. and a caveat in case we're wrong...
FOMC Minutes Leaked Early After Embargo Broken, Fed Warns Risk To GDP Forecast "Tilted To The Downside"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/19/2015 12:41 -0500Seconds ago, someone accidentally (we hope) pulled a Janet Yellen as the following just came across the wires
FOMC MINUTES: MEMB 'GENERALLY AGREED' MORE INFO NEEDED TO HIKE
FOMC MINUTES: NO TIP TOWARDS SEPT LIFTOFF, DOESN'T RULE IT OUT
But the bottom line is that the Fed just admitted things are going from bad to worse: "The risks to the forecast for real GDP and inflation were seen as tilted to the downside." The question now is what comes first: QE4 or the first rate hike in nearly a decade.
Distressed American Workers Expose The Fallacy Of Improving Unemployment Numbers
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/19/2015 11:18 -0500“Over the past five years, our businesses have created more than 11 million new jobs. Our economy is growing and creating jobs at the fastest pace since 1999.” - President Obama
Despite those feel-good headlines, the average American is far, far from solid financial footing.
RANSQUAWK JULY 28th-29th FOMC MINUTES PREVIEW - Participants will be looking for communication as to when the FOMC will start to normalise rates and how close US economy is to meeting the central bank's criteria
Submitted by RANSquawk Video on 08/19/2015 05:59 -0500
PREVIEW: July 28th-29th FOMC minutes due at 1900BST/1300CDT
- Markets looking for clarification for a September or December lift-off after the FOMC statement did not send any overt signals
No, Bernanke … Defense Spending Does NOT Help the Economy!
Submitted by George Washington on 08/18/2015 14:01 -0500- Afghanistan
- Alan Greenspan
- Barney Frank
- Ben Bernanke
- Ben Bernanke
- China
- Chris Martenson
- Congressional Budget Office
- Dean Baker
- Deficit Spending
- Department Of Commerce
- ETC
- Federal Reserve
- Federal Reserve Bank
- Global Economy
- Global Warming
- Iraq
- James Galbraith
- Japan
- John Maynard Keynes
- Joint Economic Committee
- Joseph Stiglitz
- Krugman
- Larry Summers
- Ludwig von Mises
- Main Street
- Maynard Keynes
- Middle East
- Monetary Policy
- national security
- Paul Krugman
- Purchasing Power
- Recession
- Robert Gates
- Ron Paul
- Treasury Department
- Unemployment
Bernanke Shills for El Militario-Industrio Complexo
Corporate Debt - Road To Oblivion In A Bear Market
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/17/2015 16:10 -0500“The way to wealth in a bull market is debt. The way to oblivion in a bear market is also debt, and nobody rings a bell.” – James Grant
Frontrunning: August 17
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/17/2015 06:40 -0500- Oil moves nearer six-year low on Japan data, oversupply (Reuters)
- Commodity Slide Spurs Treasuries as Emerging Markets Extend Drop (BBG)
- Because 7 years is "just right" - BOE Official Says Don’t Wait Too Long on Rates (WSJ)
- How Medicare Rewards Copious Nursing-Home Therapy (WSJ)
- Millennials Are Developing Parents’ Taste for Jaguars, Cadillacs (BBG) ... and even more debt
- Mexican Billionaire’s Firms Swept Up in U.S. Probe of Citigroup (BBG)
American Malls In Meltdown - The Economic Recovery Is Complete & Utter Fraud
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/16/2015 22:15 -0500What happens when we roll back into the next official recession, unemployment soars, and consumers really stop spending? What is revealed when you look under the hood of this economic recovery is that it is a complete and utter fraud. The recovery is nothing but smoke and mirrors, buoyed by subprime auto debt, really subprime student loan debt, corporate stock buybacks, and Fed financed bubbles in stocks, real estate, and bonds. The four retailers listed below are nothing but zombies, kept alive by the Fed’s ZIRP and QE, as they stumble towards their ultimate deaths. The coming recession will be the knife through their skulls, putting them out of their misery.





