How much more will these people have to pay? Between 5 and 10 times what they’re paying now. Almost all these homeowners are underwater. They bought at the bubbliest period.
September 22nd, 2009 | Bill Bonner | 2 comments | ContinuedAll Posts Tagged With: "bull market"
The American Empire Depended on Trade…and the Dollar
We would name the period between the fall of the Berlin Wall and the fall of Lehman Bros – a period of only 19 years – as the peak of US power and wealth. Of course, Americans were dreaming during those years.
September 14th, 2009 | Bill Bonner | 3 comments | Continued
September is the Worst Month for the Stock Market
In fact, the S&P has declined in 11 of the past 20 Septembers. You may be inclined to say, “That’s not so impressive.” But an average decline of 10 points is something worth noting.
September 4th, 2009 | Bill Jenkins | 3 comments | Continued
Should You Buy Stocks Now to Take Advantage of Bull Market?
Stocks and oil are at their highest levels so far this year. With such profits at hand people figure they don’t need the dollar. Investors run to the safety of the greenback when financial storms approach. But now…they think it will be clear sailing.
August 25th, 2009 | Bill Bonner | 0 comments | Continued
Household Debt Represents Spending Taken From the Future
But you can’t take an infinite amount from future earnings. You reach a point when the future can’t handle it. As more and more future earnings are absorbed by past consumption, pretty soon there’s not enough left to live on. At some point, so much of earnings are devoted to paying the interest…
August 11th, 2009 | Bill Bonner | 3 comments | Continued
Investors Are Betting On Recovery
Make no mistake though. No one knows how long this rally will last – certainly no one here at The Daily Reckoning vacation headquarters. It will continue until it runs out of gas. That could be tomorrow. It could be months from now.
August 6th, 2009 | Bill Bonner | 2 comments | Continued
We Don’t Gamble on Stocks in a Depression
Sticking with the basics, what we notice is that stocks, bonds and commodities move in broad patterns that last for many years. Not to put too fine a point on it, but they go up and then they go down. Or vice versa. Just looking at the last 50 years, stocks were very expensive in 1966.
August 4th, 2009 | Bill Bonner | 0 comments | Continued
Your Actively Managed Superannuation Fund Cannot Beat the Market
There are at least two points worth noting in this survey, three actually. First, actively managed funds, on average, don’t beat the market. Unless you know a genius manager, paying for results doesn’t deliver them.
July 6th, 2009 | Dan Denning | 10 comments | Continued
A Golden Vending Machine
The Dow fell another 107 points yesterday. Oil held steady at $70. The dollar fell to $1.38. And gold rose $4 to 932…
June 18th, 2009 | Bill Bonner | 8 comments | Continued
Attack of the Bond Yields
Just to be clear though, the big trends now are soaring inflation and falling financial asset prices, along with increased energy scarcity. This produces a variety of pair trades, which include: short government bonds, long energy, short residential housing, long gold, and probably short commercial real estate and corporate bonds as well, while going long farmland and agriculture.
June 11th, 2009 | Dan Denning | 4 comments | Continued
Last Decade: Buy Gold, This Decade: Buy Energy
It’s not technically a new decade yet. But if the trade of the last decade was to sell stocks and buy gold, then maybe the best trade for the next ten years is to sell bonds and buy energy. Gas, coal, oil, conventional, unconventional, renewable, alternative. You have a whole portfolio of choices.
June 10th, 2009 | Dan Denning | 10 comments | Continued
Latest Energy Bull Market Won’t Be Confined to Crude Oil
That said, coal stocks stand to lose the most from cap-and-trade or emissions trading schemes that put a price on carbon dioxide. Even so, there ARE plenty of unconventional hydrocarbons out there that can provide transportation fuel or gas streams for turbines to generate electricity.
May 25th, 2009 | Dan Denning | 1 comment | Continued
Debt Built Up to Levels Even Obama Says Are “Unsustainable”
And then, all that debt that they built up over the last quarter century is a problem. It has to be paid down to the point where it isn’t a problem. And that means the obvious thing – people have to cut back on their spending.
May 20th, 2009 | Bill Bonner | 0 comments | Continued
What Happens to Gold When High Inflation, Excess Cash, and Falling Dollar Jolts Economy?
We’re about eight years into the bull market, and gold has breached the $1,000 level twice and has spent weeks trading above the old high of $850. Some observers are now saying that gold’s pretty much had its day…
May 8th, 2009 | Jeff Clark | 9 comments | Continued
Investors to Drive Next Leg of Bull Market in Gold
So far, so bullish. But why no new high, therefore, in the gold price already this year? Philip Klapwijk attributes gold’s failure at $1,000 back in February to the “astounding” flow of scrap metal coming from cash-strapped consumers worldwide.
April 10th, 2009 | Adrian Ash | 0 comments | Continued

