Wall Street sleuths are wondering whether the Federal Reserve is quietly doing more to calm the U.S. repo market than just the headline-grabbing liquidity injections that have captivated observers for months.
Just like it did ten years ago, the market is beginning a new decade with the prevailing sentiment unquestionably stretched...
Gold prices on Monday rose to their highest level since early November to start a shortened holiday week that kicked off with U.S. stocks also recording...
Joshua Rotbart, managing partner and founder of Rotbart & Co., discusses the record price of gold in pounds and where he thinks it's heading in 2020.
The prominent chief investment officer at Guggenheim Partners warns that cracks are forming in a market that has become primed by a Federal Reserve willing...
Apathy mounts, leading to gold-stock selling, which is what’s necessary to rebalance sentiment after a major upleg...
And now with this Q4 being the polar opposite to last year and its current party like it’s 1999 atmosphere I find myself in the same spot: Making a case for technical reversion first before the next bull/bear debate.
Remember folks, stocks don't go up in a straight line.
Some of the most familiar names -- Forever 21 Inc., Barneys New York Inc. and Payless Inc.-- have already collapsed into bankruptcy or liquidated this year. In 2019 alone, Coresight Research estimates, retailers have shut more than 9,300 stores.
They now have these two-fold issues, where the used trucks have piled up next to the new, and they are taking sizable losses to just cut and dump trucks.
Automakers in the past year cut thousands of jobs and shuttered factories as industry vehicle sales slow and fears of an economic slowdown pick up.
Some 40% of public stocks quoted in the U.S. have negative tangible book value, meaning that their tangible assets aren’t worth enough to repay all their debt.
U.S. stocks face a greater-than-usual risk of a sell-off next year, with investors overconfident in an economic resurgence, Joseph Davis, who also serves as Vanguard’s chief economist
The next bubble, the debt bubble, keeps building, fed by growing inequality, individuals who remain enslaved to the banks that reap enormous profits from them as they descend further into debt...
This chart shows how people answered the question, "How much money do you have in your savings account?"
"The Fed will expand its balance sheet through April/May. After that, markets may once again have to confront a world with limited trade progress and no further Fed support."
Everything of any importance that happened during 2019, all in one sacartically-written report. The ideal long read for the holidays.
Fund managers and strategists say there are several reasons to believe that the stock market will not continue on a path of notching double-digit annual returns like it did during the late ‘90s tech bubble.
Australia could be on its way towards becoming the world’s largest gold producer by the mid-2020s, according to forecasts in the Australian Department of Industry...
The social and economic buffers have thinned, leaving the entire system increasingly fragile: we sense this, but are unable to identify with our own economic class, and so we're left powerless and fragmented.