Gold rose overnight in a range of $1311 - $1319.25, with concerns of global growth (inverted US yield curve, global equities hammered) spurring some safe haven buying. Dovish comments from the Fed’s Evans....
(Leveraged VIX Volume Highest In History) The US Treasury yield curved inverted on Friday for the first time since 2007 and it became ever more inverted today as 10-year T-Note Volatility....
Chris says there's only days left to find opportunities in gold, because once price breaks above $1345, there's at least $250 of price expansion ahead...
Economists’ forecasts tend to diverge ahead of recessions. They’re diverging now.
There is no better barometer on the health of the U.S. economy than housing. It’s an industry that encompasses a myriad of vital sectors — banking, manufacturing
With new sources of uncertainty seemingly proliferating by the day, a broad economic slowdown should come as no surprise. And as long as the rules and institutions governing the global economy remain in doubt
This is an open letter to Jerome Powell and the Fed. In your March 8 speech on Normalization and the Road Ahead, you spoke of diversity, zero-bound interest rate problem, and the Fed's path to normalization.
Does the "trade of the century" mean that risky assets are due for another meltdown? David explores that and more in his weekly update...
Born between 1981 to 2000, Millennials now average 26 years of age, and comprise about 27% of the North American population. This generation is coming of age in precarious financial circumstances. …
To finance these purchases the Bank of Japan creates money and expands the monetary base. It adds to its other attempts to do so as for example it also buys commercial property ( in a similar route to the equity market it buys exchange-traded funds or ETFs)
BIS chief Agustin Carstens has said that central banks are wary about issuing digital currencies due to the "huge operational consequences."
Let's examine the numbers and study the relationship between margin debt and the market, using the S&P 500 as the surrogate for the latter.
"We’ve never seen monetary easing so long, so broad, so big."
Jim says the gold market is getting the signal that the Fed is throwing in the towel. Here's what it means for Fed policy, gold, inflation, and more...
Former U.S. Federal Reserve chair Janet Yellen said on Monday the U.S. Treasury yield curve may signal the need to cut interest rates at some point, but it does not signal a recession.
Gold pushes higher again Monday, poised for its best finish in about a month, as financial markets keep attention fixed on global growth fears and a...
With each passing month, we’re greeted with more evidence of a fact that The Federal Reserve has no idea what it’s doing. For many of us, this is not the least bit of a surprise. Central planning of the economy cannot work. Yet, never ones to admit that they’re wrong, the main job of a…
The signal the gold market is getting right now is the Fed is throwing in the towel. . . .
The Fed’s big shift will end the tightening wave for Asia’s central banks and open the door for future easing,"
Indexes in Australia, Hong Kong and China tumbled on Monday, with Japan’s Topix index and a gauge of regional equities heading for their steepest declines this year.