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It looks like the Federal Reserve is about to get back into the bond business and help the US government deal with its massive debt.
The Treasury Department announced yesterday that it will not have to borrow as much money in the third quarter of fiscal 2019 as originally anticipated. But this is not because of a slowdown in government spending. According to a Treasury official cited by Reuters, the reason for the lower borrowing estimate is due to an anticipated increase in Fed Treasury holdings as the central bank ends its balance sheet reduction program.
    Why the Fed Is Willing to Risk a Market Bubble
Apr 30, 2019 - 06:26:04 PDT
Historically low interest rates engineered by the Fed have propelled the bull market, and a policy reversal runs the risk of sending shares tumbling.
Price gains for the three months ending in February were the slowest since mid-2012, and the regional impacts were starkly delineated, according to the...
Between the buy signals and the bullish candles, there are plenty of green shoots to be be seen on these gold charts...
Central banks added more gold to their reserves last month, continuing a trend that stretches back into last year.
Globally, central banks added another 31 net tons of gold in March, according to the latest report by the World Gold Council based on International Monetary Fund data. That brings the total increase in central bank gold holdings this year to 101 tons.
U.S. central bankers sound intent on getting inflation higher, after missing their target almost continually since adopting it in 2012. Officials worry that if they can’t hit 2 percent inflation amid strong growth and low unemployment they may never get there.
    NYT: How Will the Fed Fight the Next Recession?
Apr 30, 2019 - 05:17:32 PDT
It’s Trying to Figure That Out Right Now. The central bank has fewer arrows in its quiver to protect the economy from the normal ups and downs.
The Federal Reserve this week will likely reinforce a theme that has cheered consumers and investors since the start of the year: No interest rates hikes are likely anytime...
Follows opposition's Guaido calling for military uprising in video surrounded by soldiers...
Light touch financial regulation after the U.K. leaves the European Union will not help the British financial sector, according to a deputy governor at the Bank of England.
Earlier, China’s first official gauge of the manufacturing sector in April fell, signaling that more work is needed to bed down the economic stabilization seen in the first quarter.
    Part 2: Mike Maloney & Overstock CEO Patrick Byrne
Apr 30, 2019 - 04:27:43 PDT
The discussion continues... Enjoy part two of Mike and Patrick's eye-opening conversation. If you missed part 1, watch it here.
In the fall of 2018, Felix Zulauf, head of Swiss hedge fund Zulauf Asset Managment, said investors were facing the start of a “structural bear market.” In...
One in Seven Homes in Japan Is Empty.
    Gold Traders’ Report - April 29, 2019
Apr 29, 2019 - 13:23:02 PDT
Gold traded lower last night in a range of $1280 - $1286.80. The yellow metal remained steady around $1286 during Asian hours, failing to advance against a modest decline in the US dollar (DX from 98.07 – 97.92).
At the peak of its power in 1350 BC, thousands of years ago, ancient Egypt was like nothing ever seen before. The great Kingdom was thriving under an efficient system of agricultural production and…
    Boomers Are Facing A Financial Crisis
Apr 29, 2019 - 12:54:59 PDT
There is a “crisis” brewing in America which will affect more Americans than the subprime crisis in 2008...
Federal Reserve economists have floated the idea of a “standing repo facility” which would allow banks to exchange Treasurys for reserves.
Michael says after last week's criminality of the interventionists in gold was in full bloom, he's once again long gold. Here's why...
    Central Banking Is Central Planning
Apr 29, 2019 - 11:10:11 PDT
The long history of central banking, and especially over the last 100 years of paper monies and out-of-control government deficit spending partly funded by “monetization” of the debt, has more than clearly demonstrated that the epoch of modern central banking needs to come to an end.