The delayed arrival of a US recession will weigh on stocks in the second half of the year, according to Bank of America Corp. strategists, who say a resilient economy thus far means interest rates will stay higher for longer.
German bonds erased losses and money markets trimmed bets on further European Central Bank tightening after Bank of France Governor Francois Villeroy de Galhau said rate bets have been excessively volatile.
It's getting harder for Americans to make ends meet without dipping into their cash reserves, a new report finds.
Worker burnout-- are you burned out? Well, levels have reached a new high according to one recent survey. The Future Forum polling more than 10,000 workers around the world, and 42% of them say they're feeling mentally and physically exhausted due to stress at work.
Oil fell almost 3% on Friday and was on course for a weekly decline, pressured by concerns of more U.S. Federal Reserve interest rate hikes that could weigh on demand, and signs of ample supply. Brent crude futures were down $2.37, or 2.8%, to $82.77 a barrel by 1145 GMT, while West Texas Intermediate (WTI) U.S. crude fell $2.07, or 2.6%, to $76.42. Various signs of ample supply also weighed on the market.
Stock markets dropped across the globe on Friday and the dollar leapt to six-week highs as jobs data revived expectations the U.S. central bank would stick to its monetary tightening path.
Garbage in, garbage out. The phrase is usually associated with computers, but it also applies to the formulas used to generate government economic data. In this episode of the Friday Gold Wrap podcast, host Mike Maharrey goes over the January CPI and retail sales data with that phrase in mind.
Barrick gold is now mining some of the most expensive gold ever, and they aren't the only ones. More gold miners are reporting even higher costs. The cost at the world's second-largest gold mining company hit a new all-time high this year while its production hit a 22-year low...
Seven men found the coins on the Culden Faw Estate, Buckinghamshire in April 2019 including 12 rare gold nobles from the reign of Edward III.
Gordon stated that the US Federal Reserve is going to pause after its next interest rate increase. Then the U.S. central bank will stop and have a look at the impact of the hikes on U.S. consumers. nflation numbers for the U.S. came broadly in-line with expectations, and will continue to come off through this year, he added.
Renowned geopolitical and financial cycle expert Charles Nenner said back in late November, interest rates were on the way down but “for the very short term.” Nenner also predicted that inflation might come down to around 6.5%. The latest CPI number clocked in this week at 6.4%. Nenner was right on both counts.
Bullion proved to be one of the most resilient assets to own last year: it exited 2022 virtually unchanged even as the Fed raised rates by a phenomenal 425 basis points, sending real yields soaring as a consequence.
"The media’s incentive is to tell us the portion of the truth that is entertaining. And what we have demonstrated by our behavior is that bad news entertains us." ~ Antony Davies
According to the poll, half of Americans believe the mass media intends to misinform with its reporting. The Gallup/Knight survey found that only 26% of Americans hold a favorable view of the news media, the lowest figure recorded in the survey's five-year history. 53% have an expressly unfavorable view.
While it won't tell us anything we don't know - since it is two months delayed and we already get monthly updates from the Fed via the G.19 statement - this morning the NY Fed published its quarterly Household Debt and Credit report, which showed that total household debt in the fourth quarter of 2022 rose by 2.4% or $394 billion, the largest nominal quarterly increase in twenty years, to a record $16.90 trillion. Balances now stand $2.75 trillion higher than at the end of 2019, before the pandemic recession.
In a speech distributed ahead of the Munich Security Conference, Soros backed the idea of using experimental geosolar technologies to shield the Arctic from melting, as well as an overhaul of international finance to address the challenge ahead.
Debt is vital to the functioning of the world economy. But, after soaring in the aftermath of the 2008 global financial crisis and the COVID-19 pandemic of recent years, it has reached unprecedented levels: as of last June, total debt amounted to $300 trillion, or 349% of world GDP. With negative supply shocks persisting, and the world’s major central banks scrambling to rein in inflation, debt risks are becoming increasingly alarming.
The world's two largest foreign holders of US treasuries, Japan and China, continued to pare down their holdings of US debt in December, data from the US Treasury Department showed on Wednesday.
Here is the sickening forecast of Federal budget deficits. Budget deficits are forecast to keep rising and are project to hit -$20 TRILLION over the next 10 years.
An agency within the Department of Homeland Security has warned owners of Apple products of a security vulnerability which affects iPhones, iPads and MacOS devices.