We are very close to the reversal of the short-term price correction in gold and silver, and both metals will...
With the financial results in on many of the primary silver miners, the results performed as I anticipated. Thus, the financial metric used to forecast the change in these primary silver miners' stock prices turned out to be a reliable indicator. This brief report will show the Q3 2020 results for...
“We would be printing trillions of dollars more and all of that ultimately has extraordinarily positive repercussions for gold,” he said. We are discovering a lot less gold than we are producing. We will be producing 50% less gold than we do today.
Four market analysts break down how the outcome of the 2020 presidential election could impact U.S. stocks in the near term.
Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell said that economic stimulus will be the chamber's top priority before the end of the year.
If the economic and financial situation continues to deteriorate for the rest of the year and into 2021, we could see...
Starting in March, a series of emergency measures were rolled out that temporarily eliminated or blunted restrictions on bank balance sheets, along with ramped up support for financial markets that in the US at least, was unprecedented.
Fed Chair Jerome Powell will likely avoid discussing election results at Thursday’s FOMC press conference and instead stress the urgency for further fiscal support while remaini…
The Federal Reserves is the largest holder of US Treasury debt and it looks like they are here to stay. Both commercial and residential real estate have benefited from the massive expansion of The …
"Once the Fed starts playing catch up with rising expected prices, a bond market crash is certain. Many will look at MMT and say, inflation isn’t a bug, it’s a feature."
Political paralysis looms over a turbulent period for the United States amid a spike in coronavirus cases and the expiration of emergency federal aid.
Not only does this mean that forward returns will likely be exceptionally poor, it means that downside risk has also never been greater than it is today.
This is an important week for financial markets on so many levels. Besides the U.S. elections that held the headlines (and the market’s volatility) for the last several months, three major central banks have issued or are preparing to issue their monetary policy decisions.
According to the Financial Times from October 18, 2020, senior Federal Reserve officials are calling for tougher financial regulation to prevent the US central bank’s low interest rate policies from giving rise to excessive risk taking and asset bubbles in the markets.
(Bloomberg) -- Bond traders are throwing in the towel on bets for more fiscal stimulus, sending yields reeling, as pressure mounts for the Federal Reserve to fill the gap with support for the pandemic-battered economy.While results of the U.S. election continue to roll in, the likelihood of a divided government has delivered a weighty blow to the prospects for new government spending, upending a consensus bet against Treasuries. Even the U.S.’s announcement of record quarterly debt sales couldn’t damp the biggest one-day rally since April, with a slight tilt toward shorter-dated issuance helping flatten the yield curve.The abrupt shift in outlook raises the stakes for the Federal Reserve’s next policy decision Thursday. Chair Jerome Powell is unlikely to do anything hasty, like immediately shifting policy this week, but the current moves suggest markets are looking to him to weigh in on the outlook for further economic aid -- potentially sealing the fate of so-called reflation trades and sending yields lo...
"A bottle of bourbon was the only way I could make it through the night."
We're Number One in wealth, income and power inequality, yea for the Fed and the Empire!
Value stocks are underperforming, bond yields are sliding, inflation expectations are dropping and defensive tech stocks are reclaiming market leadership.
That leaves economists and investors alike scratching their heads, wondering what's next. For some experts, the outcome means the economy - and, by extension, the stock market - is barreling towards a worst-case scenario of sorts.
The euro zone's economic recovery stalled last month as a second wave of coronavirus cases and restrictions imposed to try and contain it whacked activity in the bloc's dominant service industry, pointing to a double-dip recession, a survey showed.