Something BIG just happened in the U.S. Mint Gold Eagle Market this month. Not only have Gold Eagle sales in the first three weeks of January surpassed last year's total by a factor of three, but it's also the highest figure since the 2008-2009 Financial Crisis. While Silver Eagle sales have been the...
We are announcing a TRADE TRIGGER SHORT trade for First Majestic, ticker AG. In our Freeport-McMoRan update on Saturday, we mentioned that we were looking at First Majestic as a possible Short Trade. However, due to First Majestic's volatile nature, we took the trade but didn't send out the TRIGGER...
When a Bubble gets bigger and bigger, the wall of the bubble becomes thinner and thinner. At some point, the bubble finally pops, and all the fun is over. The broader markets today represent that bubble. However, the investors that are making the bubble larger and weaker don't realize they...
This is a Trade Update for Freeport McMoRan for Gold Members. In this update, we will provide some technical indicators and levels showing our price targets for exiting our Freeport-McMoRan trade. When we set up the trade, we knew how much we were going to risk in order to achieve our reward...
Gold prices fell as much as 1.8% on Friday as a broader market sell-off weighed on the metal along with a firm dollar, while hopes for further stimulus from the U.S. kept bullion on track for its first weekly gain in three.
Round Table Segment 2, Financial Markets Outlook - Part 2
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bB08jU_TqLQ&t=1s
Will Be "Most Important Investing Event Of Your Lives"
Banks cashed in on the white-hot IPO market, record debt issuance, and sky-high trading volume — all of which played out as economic peril softened the consumer side of their businesses.
Millions have been shut out of receiving $1,200 or $600 checks because their information is not on file. Biden wants the Treasury Department to fix that.
If you want to know what’s going to happen to inflation in the months or even years ahead, don’t listen to the pundits. The first is the interest rate on regular U.S. Treasury bonds. The second is the interest rate on inflation-adjusted U.S. Treasury bonds, known as “TIPS.”
Are you ready for this week’s absurdity? Here’s our Friday roll-up of the most ridiculous stories from around the world that are threats to your liberty, risks to your prosperity… and on occasion…
Central banks unleashed $20 trillion in monetary and fiscal stimulus across the world in 2020 alone.And with more likely coming very soon… inflation concerns are mounting.The rules of investing are changing. And most folks with traditional portfolios are going to be caught completely unaware by this, warns real estate expert, Victor Menasce.Our friend Adam Taggart at PeakProsperity.com sat down with Victor to discuss why now may be an extremely good time to consider adding or increasing income-producing real estate to your portfolio.
Rent and occupancy will likely drop 22% in San Francisco in 2021, the largest decline in the U.S., as technology companies embrace remote work, according to a report by Green Street.
The Fed's balance sheet rose last week to a new high of $7.4 trillion, from $4.1 trillion a year ago.
What accounts for the sharp rise in the public debt ratio in OECD countries?
A “vaccine passport” or “e-vaccination certification of compliance for border crossing regulations” could be required to enable seamless border-crossing.
"The world has changed," Treasury Secretary nominee Janet Yellen told senators this week. As a politician it’s easy to embrace MMT,” Cielinski said. “You’re going to see in the next few years many economies test the limits of this.”
The dollar edged slightly higher on Friday after three straight days of losses, and riskier currencies fell, as bleak economic data gave global equity markets reason to pause after another week of record highs.
The global bond and stock markets could have another three years of the bubble ballooning before we get a repeat of the Great Financial Crisis, this time on steroids. We’re expecting the debt bubble to deflate well before that...