Markets – free markets – are meant to be unstable. They are meant to crack-up from time to time. And thank God they do. Otherwise, we’d be stuck forever with zombie industries and dead end investments.
February 7th, 2012 | Bill Bonner | 0 comments | ContinuedAll Posts Tagged With: "credit rating"
How the Banking Crisis Affects the Real Economy
What Australia has – commodity wealth – is strategically important. But what it doesn’t have – capital – is economically urgent.
The banking crisis will mean small Aussie businesses may start to feel the crunch of Europe’s credit crisis in 2012.
December 19th, 2011 | Dan Denning | 5 comments | Continued
S&P Puts Culture of Greed on Death Watch
Well you can forget about today’s modest little overnight rally in the US and Europe. Ratings agency Standard and Poor’s rained on everyone’s parade after the market closed. S&P downgraded 37 global banks. It upgraded two.
You’d think banking would be a low-profit, low-growth business to be in during a Credit Depression. At least we’d think so.
November 30th, 2011 | Dan Denning | 0 comments | ContinuedCLF – The RBA’s Pre-emptive Bank Bailout
The RBA has announced how the CLF – a kind of pre-emptive bank bailout would work.
Of course… they won’t call it that.
November 29th, 2011 | Dan Denning | 6 comments | Continued
Banking Crisis Anatomy
Did bankers around the world learn their lesson in the banking crisis of 2008?
Yep, they sure did. They learnt the lesson that when they get into financial trouble they can expect the government to bail them out. That’s why they are back in exactly the same fix again today.
But wait, ‘exactly the same fix’?
November 26th, 2011 | Nickolai Hubble | 2 comments | Continued
US Bonds Ride Euro’s Demise
The looming breakdown of the Euro is a massively deflationary event for stock and commodity prices (although not US bonds, as you’ll see in a moment). It’s going to dominate the news until the moment reaches its crisis. And the crisis may be at hand.
November 22nd, 2011 | Dan Denning | 4 comments | Continued
Australia to Borrow as Much as $300 billion
In February the government raised its borrowing ceiling from $75 billion to $200 billion. Last week, Finance Minister Lindsay Tanner said the bleak IMF report highlighted the big revenue gap in Australia’s budget. He said Australia might have to raise its debt ceiling to $300 billion. This is the nice thing about being a sovereign government. A household cannot arbitrarily vote itself the power to go deeper into debt…
April 27th, 2009 | Dan Denning | 9 comments | Continued


