And these are the good times. What happens in a recession?
A rally to the $1600 to $1650 level may be seen very quickly...
Anyone who doubts the risks posed by murky shadow banks need only look to India, where the collapse of one such lender has sparked a nationwide credit crunch and raised fears of a Lehman-like financial crisis.
Euro-zone manufacturing remained near the weakest in seven years last month, a poor start to the final quarter that raises pressure on the region’s governments to...
If profits don’t improve, warns Blackstone strategist. Our call of the day anticipates a recession will hit hard, but not for at least six months
Awesome action in gold's chart!
The bankers were unsuccessful getting gold's price to drop, even though they're shorting infinite amounts of paper. Harvey explains...
Yesterday's Fed meeting may have lit a fire under silver and gold...
The dollars that you work hard for are always buying less and less, yet the government tells you there's 'not enough inflation'.
The market levitates higher on phony economic data from the Government, Trump tweets, Fed money printing and hedge fund algorithms chasing headline and twitter sound bites.
Thanks to a melt-up today, US equities (apart from Trannies) ended the week higher...
I've reiterated many times that not only do I need to see the market complete a pullback in a corrective structure, but I also...
“We believe monetary policy is in a good place.” – Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell, October 30, 2019.
But It's Not All Good News for Workers.
As Argentina careens toward a default, investors are paying a premium for bonds that they think will give them more negotiating power.
At the current pace the Fed's balance sheet would hit a new record in early 2020 i.e January/February. Turns out the autopilot is set to vertical.
Even though the federal government spent more money (estimated to be $300 billion for various programs) and reduced taxes for businesses and individuals the underlying growth rate of the economy did not change one iota.
There was a time Japan was the world’s second largest economy, on track to bypass the world’s largest economy, the US.
The Japanese economy is muddling along while managing declining growth, prosperity and population...
The New York Fed added $104.583 billion in liquidity to financial markets...