Will we wonder, what were we thinking? and marvel anew at the madness of crowds?
Gold futures on Thursday remain buoyant, as some investors in the commodity foresee a lower-for-longer, interest-rate regime benefiting the yellow metal,...
From China’s struggling economy to the EU’s existential crisis and an apparently insurmountable divide within the U.S., 2020 is set to be a year of global chaos and major upheaval...
The mainstream media is trying to strangle any sources who warn of the coronavirus threat. What don't they want you to know?
As of Thursday, more than 28,000 cases of coronavirus have been reported, resulting in at least 565 deaths.
Bulls even shrugged off the prevailing bullish sentiment surrounding the US dollar, which remained supported by the incoming positive domestic data and tends to weigh on the dollar-denominated commodity.
Once again investors are made to believe that nothing matters. Only 2 trading days after Friday’s sell off $NDX made new all time history highs. Only 3 days after Friday’s sell-off $SPX…
Data suggests the Fed is more of a follower and less of a leader when it comes to interest rates.
Wasn't this supposed to be a temporary thing?
ECB's Lagarde said a decade of crisis fighting has left policy makers with few options for more monetary stimulus, just as new concerns such as the coronavirus outbreak arise.
The report is a blow to Europe’s largest economy, which had shown signs of working its way out of a slump that left it with the weakest annual growth since 2013. Orders are a key gauge because they indicate future output.
The Coronavirus has officially reached the “pandemic” status. It’s a scary word that means the coronavirus has crossed international boundaries. So, what does this mean for the markets?
The Thai baht has lost around 4.1% against the U.S. dollar so far this year, reversing almost half of its 7.9% gains against the greenback in 2019.
The Baltic Exchange’s main sea freight index dropped on Wednesday, with the capesize segment slumping to an all-time low due to reduced demand for ships and muted activity in China amid a coronavirus outbreak.
The Telegraph: The longer Beijing enforces curbs on work and travel, the greater the global economic shock...
On 5 February, the Monetary Policy Committee of the Bank of Thailand (BoT) voted unanimously to cut the policy rate by 25 basis points, bringing the rate down to 1.00% from 1.25%.
China’s $1.5 Trillion Pile of Bad Debt Lures Foreign Funds.
China says it will slash tariffs on $75 billion in U.S. goods. Coronavirus death toll rises to more than 560.
If it seems like you’re working harder just to pay the bills nowadays, at least take comfort in your shared struggle: the rising costs of housing and health care and the disappearance of middle-skill jobs are plaguing people in most other developed nations, too.
Last October, the Federal Reserve relaunched quantitative easing. Of course, Fed Chairman Jerome Powell insists it's not quantitative easing. But as Peter Schiff pointed out in a recent tweet, that debate is really just semantics.The argument over whether the current Fed balance sheet expansion constitutes QE is pointless. QE was always just a euphemism for debt monetization. The Fed monetized debt in the past, its monetizing more debt in the present, and it will monetize even more debt in the future!"