Archive for Byron King

Byron King currently serves as an attorney in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. He received his Juris Doctor from the University of Pittsburgh School of Law in 1981 and is a cum laude graduate of Harvard University. Byron is also co-editor of Outstanding Investments.

post thumbnail

Welcome to Murphy’s Market

If you sold out of the stock market last year – or even back in June or early July 2008 – you probably feel pretty good right now. And if you took the cash and spread it around to a group of well-run banks, so as to take advantage of the FDIC insurance, then you must be feeling fine. Read no further. Take the rest of the day off. But if you still have some skin in the game, you’ll want to hear what Byron King has to say…

October 10th, 2008 | Byron King | 0 comments | Continued
post thumbnail

From the Gold Pan… Inflation, Deflation and Precious Metals

The key to the rising price for gold in the 1930s was the effort by President Franklin D. Roosevelt to raise the nominal price of gold from $20 to $35 per ounce. It was still - in many respects - a gold standard world back then. But in raising the gold price, FDR also indirectly spurred the market capitalization of much of the mining industry. One thing to keep in mind is this. We know a few things about inflation, both practically and from economic theory…

September 26th, 2008 | Byron King | 2 comments | Continued
post thumbnail

The Markets Are Making Almost No Sense

The future of the U.S. dollar looks terrible, yet the dollar is rising at a record-setting pace. And depletion is causing oil output in some areas to…well, fall off a cliff, if I may use that phrase. Energy and commodity stocks are tumbling like buffalo in the olden days of Alberta. Let’s start with the U.S. dollar. It’s strengthening on world markets, but why? Is there some sort of good news about the U.S. economy we’ve missed? Is the U.S. tax code suddenly more capital friendly?

September 18th, 2008 | Byron King | 6 comments | Continued
post thumbnail

2008 Energy & Geology Tour

My journey began in mid-July, when I flew west to Vancouver via Air Canada. I spent a week there, attending the Agora Financial Investment Symposium…

September 3rd, 2008 | Byron King | 0 comments | Continued
post thumbnail

The Energy Resources Are Out There

In the world of energy and scarcity, the name of the next president of the United States will matter quite a bit. “People are policy,” as Ronald Reagan used to say. But then again, a lot of energy and scarcity facts defy party labels. The energy resources are out there. They are what they are and where they are. We can exploit the resources or not. But it’s not like in Star Trek…

August 28th, 2008 | Byron King | 1 comment | Continued
post thumbnail

What Makes the Wheels on a Bus Go “Round and Round”? Electricity!

What do a bus in Beijing, the Ronald Reagan Presidential Library, offshore oil production platforms in the Gulf of Alaska and a luxury ski resort in Russia have in common? They all need electricity…and they want that power to be on-site and self- contained. Imagine a municipal bus that’s powered by an electric motor, crawling along the crowded streets of Beijing…

July 31st, 2008 | Byron King | 0 comments | Continued
post thumbnail

A View from the Peak of the Global Economy

The theme of this year’s Agora Financial Investment Symposium is “View From the Peak.” The title alludes to Peak Oil, as well as peak everything else. We have 6.5 billion people on Earth, with more arriving every day. A fortunate few hundred million of us already live in the developed world. And now several billion other souls are working their way out of poverty, and that takes resources. So the world demand for everything (energy, steel, cement, food, water, you name it) is rising.

July 25th, 2008 | Byron King | 2 comments | Continued
post thumbnail

Rare Earth Elements: A Beginner’s Guide

Rare earth elements consist of a group of 15 metals. In most cases and usage patterns in the modern economy, these 15 elements are oxides. The names of the elements are Cerium, Dysprosium, Erbium, Europium, Gadolinium, Holmium, Lanthanum, Lutetium, Neodymium, Praseodymium, Samarium, Terbium, Thulium, Ytterbium, and Yttrium. The bulk of the world’s supply of rare earth elements comes from the mineral bastnasite. Bastnasite is a mixed lanthanide fluoro-carbonate mineral.

June 19th, 2008 | Byron King | 4 comments | Continued
post thumbnail

Money Lending: Rotten to the Core

It is apparent that much of the old way of doing business – particularly in the realm of money lending – was rotten to the core. In my view, it begins with the U.S. dollar itself. The dollar has been steadily deteriorating in value for decades, so inflationary expectations are part of the worldwide consciousness. That is, just because of the long-term decline in the value of the dollar, most people expect most things to go up in price most of the time.

April 9th, 2008 | Byron King | 4 comments | Continued
post thumbnail

U.S. Population Grows Due to Immigration as Infrastructure Weakens

Why is it that the so-called “immigration debate” in the United States is often tied up with terms of race and seldom tied into the discussion of depleting resources and declining infrastructure?

February 13th, 2008 | Byron King | 15 comments | Continued
Subscribe to the Daily Reckoning

© Copyright The Daily Reckoning Australia & Port Phillip Publishing Pty LTD 2008 All rights reserved.

Port Phillip Publishing Pty Ltd holds an Australian Financial Services License: 323 988. View our Financial Services Guide.

ACN: 117 765 009 ABN: 33 117 765 009

Port Phillip Publishing
Attn: Daily Reckoning Australia
PO Box 899
Braeside
VIC 3195

Tel: 1300 667 481
Fax: (03) 9558 2219