We began having doubts about the ‘feds inflate…gold soars’ hypothesis last year. It was too easy…too obvious. And if it were that easy to inflate a nation’s currency, how come the Japanese couldn’t get the hang of it…
September 24th, 2009 | Bill Bonner | 0 comments | ContinuedAll Posts Tagged With: "currency"
US Dollar Declining as China’s Currency Rises
“We may now be entering the Asian century, dominated by a rising China and its currency. This decline of the dollar might take more than a decade, but it could happen even sooner…
September 23rd, 2009 | Bill Bonner | 5 comments | Continued
The Pound is in Trouble
“Reason #3: Industrial production in the United Kingdom has maintained double-digit losses since January: -12.1%; February: -12.7%; March: – 12.6%; April: -12.4%; May: -11.9%; June: -11.1%. Without production, nothing sells. No sales.. no income. No income… no jobs.
August 31st, 2009 | Bill Bonner | 3 comments | Continued
In a Bear Market Most Stocks Go Down, So What Do You Do?
But the stock market is not a television show or a graphic novel. It does not have a tidy beginning, an enthralling middle, and a miraculous end. Attention spans are short these days. People expect instant resolution. But the unwinding of a credit boom doesn’t work that way, especially when you have central banks and governments fighting it every step of the way…
August 31st, 2009 | Dan Denning | 31 comments | Continued
What Assets are Going to Beat Inflation in the Coming Ten Years?
Last night was trivia night in Elwood. Your editor sat across from Australian Wealth Gameplan editor Kris Sayce. Between questions about how many venomous snakes there are in Australia and whether New South Wales is larger than South Australia (it’s not), we found the time to query him about whether buying inflation indexed bonds from the Australian government was a good investment strategy.
August 14th, 2009 | Dan Denning | 4 comments | Continued
Can China Change the Rules of Global Capitalism?
For example, it appears China is beginning to throw its considerable economic weight around. It’s doing so in a tentative, experimental manner, not sure if it will offend but not seeming to care all that much. And why should it? The world is perfectly happy to do business with the largest emerging market of the next fifty years. Other issues-human rights, the environment, and the Rule of Law-are secondary.
July 13th, 2009 | Dan Denning | 5 comments | Continued
Austerity is Missing from the Financial Bailout Debate
Within the billions of sentences about the financial bailout there is one word notably absent, austerity. All talk is of payments, supports, subsidies, incurring more debt, stimulus packages.
July 3rd, 2009 | Juan Enriquez | 1 comment | Continued
Citizens Easily Coerced into Using Government Currency
The best currency is the one that is most stable in value. Historically, the premier international currencies, whether the US dollar after World War II, the Dutch guilder in the seventeenth century, or the Athenian owl in the fourth century BC, were those reliably pegged to gold.
July 1st, 2009 | Nathan Lewis | 2 comments | Continued
Japan: A Morality Tale of Banks and Government Refusing to Deal With Debt?
This may puzzle some people. Wasn’t the Japanese economy roaring into a bubble in the late 1980s? Indeed it was – driven in part by the 300 basis point decline in interest rates that resulted from the soaring yen.
May 27th, 2009 | Nathan Lewis | 0 comments | Continued
Australia’s Currency and its Economy Will Benefit from China’s Stimulus Package
“Asia is still going to expand, and China and India will have growth above 5 percent. That’s fuelling demand for commodities, so Australia’s exports are holding up much better than the rest of the G-10 countries.”
Paresh was also referring to the 21% rise in the Aussie dollar versus the U.S. dollar since February 25th.
The Greenback Dollar Decline
“We may now be entering the Asian century, dominated by a rising China and its currency,” Roubini contends. “This decline of the dollar might take more than a decade, but it could happen even sooner if we do not get our financial house in order.
May 21st, 2009 | Bill Bonner | 7 comments | Continued
Is Gold Money?
However, the question I find most interesting is whether gold is a real asset. One of the problems of investment is that there are two variables, reality and liquidity. Land or property are relatively illiquid, but are also real, in that they have a use which does not depend on their value in exchange. Gold is highly liquid, indeed it is more liquid than paper money.
March 12th, 2009 | William Rees-Mogg | 7 comments | Continued
Trouble In Tokyo
Tokyo reported terrible GDP numbers a few weeks back. The U.S. dollar was spurred by this report, moving 5 whole cents, from 93 and 1/2 to 98 and 3/4. But believe it or not, the news is still working magic in the market.
March 5th, 2009 | The Daily Reckoning | 1 comment | Continued
Downfall of the American Consumer
Not surprisingly, consumers are in trouble…so are the banks than lent them money…and so are the countries where they live. Nine of these nations – an Eastern European bloc – got together and asked the European governing council for help. They said they needed $380 billion to get through this crisis. Angela Merkel, speaking for the French and Germans, said no.
March 5th, 2009 | Bill Bonner | 3 comments | Continued
A Government of Spendaholics
In one freaking year! I thought that TheBurningPlatform.com was going to comment on this astonishing fiscal irresponsibility of Congress and the Federal Reserve, but instead they commented on the $787 billion, 1,074 page stimulus bill that was just signed by Obama by noting, “The current ‘stimulus’ package of $787 billion is more than the entire National Debt in 1978 ($771 billion).”
March 3rd, 2009 | Mogambo Guru | 0 comments | Continued

