So I told him, “I like it fine, except I wanted lobster! Rich, flakey lobster to dip into real melted butter so wickedly delicious that you can actually hear your arteries hardening from just looking at it; but I can’t order lobster because inflation in prices…
August 18th, 2009 | Mogambo Guru | 4 comments | ContinuedAll Posts Tagged With: "central bank"
Does Bernanke Really Not Understand His Fate?
Mr. Bernanke defended himself and the Fed against suggestions that he was too eager to aid large financial institutions last fall and winter, while sacrificing the interests of small businesses and everyday American citizens.
July 31st, 2009 | Byron King | 13 comments | Continued
Glenn Stevens Says Australia’s Economy Has Been Travelling Better Than Others
We’ll see about that. Stocks are certainly pricing in a profit recovery (about which we have our doubts). But Mr. Stevens also had a bit to say about credit markets and balance sheets, in comments that were not as widely reported as his comments on Australian housing. More on housing in a second.
July 29th, 2009 | Dan Denning | 25 comments | Continued
The Bubble Deniers Deny that Their Own Stimulus Caused it
In the non-communist world, if a man had money and no bread, he exchanged the former for the latter…and sat down to dinner. As if guided by an ‘invisible hand,’ millions of people did the same thing. Everyone tried to get a bit more grease on his plate, by making his own decisions based on the facts before him.
July 20th, 2009 | Bill Bonner | 9 comments | Continued
Mortgage Bubble and More at Stake Between Australia and China
Two other items of note in yesterday’s housing numbers. The First Home Buyer’s consolidated their position as the most important group propping up Australian house prices. First home buyers increased their percentage of total owner-occupied mortgage demand from 28.6% in April to 29.5% in May. Nearly a third of all demand for new mortgages is coming from new buyers sucked in by the grant. Hmmn.
July 9th, 2009 | Dan Denning | 5 comments | Continued
Never-Ending Government Lies About Markets
The purpose of government is for those who run it to plunder those who do not. Throughout history, governments have used violence, intimidation, coercion, and mass murder to enforce this system. But governments’ first line of “defense” is always a blizzard of lies…
July 2nd, 2009 | Thomas DiLorenzo | 6 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
Life Goes On
What is the stock market telling us? Has it fallen out of love with Obama? Is it terrified of his wealth redistribution policies? Is it stark raving mad? Or is it a perfectly rational reaction to a situation that lacks transparency in the banking sector and an obvious, easy way out of the economic hole we find ourselves on?
March 6th, 2009 | Dan Denning | 2 comments | Continued
Until This Debt is Reduced, Americans Will Be Reluctant to Borrow or Spend
Debt and excess capacity can be liquidated quickly – as they were in the panics of the 19th century – through bankruptcies and defaults. But, today, liquidation would have to take place over the dead body of U.S. Fed chief, Ben Bernanke…
February 9th, 2009 | Bill Bonner | 3 comments | Continued
The Fed’s War on Cash
It’s what we call the Fed’s war on cash. You see, the Fed is driving down yields on government bonds and notes of all maturities quite deliberately. More on what it’s up to below. But it’s not just the Fed that’s pulling out all the monetary stops to float the world on a sea of credit. It’s a now a race to the bottom for central bank interest rates. New Zealand’s central bank cut its main interest rates by a whopping 1.5% overnight…
December 4th, 2008 | Dan Denning | 1 comment | Continued
