Pity poor Yu! Pity the poor rich…! Here at The Daily Reckoning, as long-term DR sufferers know, we always take the part of the underdog. We almost never saw a lost cause that we didn’t want to join. We admire die-hards…and we like the company of scalawags.
July 7th, 2009 | Bill Bonner | 2 comments | ContinuedAll Posts Tagged With: "dow"
People Flee Back to the U.S. Dollar
But what you can’t count on is how much that cash will really be worth. And there lies the great trap for the lumpen investoriat. The lumpen, as you know, get their investment ideas from TV and the newspapers. The poor rubes are the last to buy in a boom and the last to sell in a bust.
July 6th, 2009 | Bill Bonner | 1 comment | Continued
There is More to Wealth than Money
Taleb’s point is not a popular one. But it is a realistic one. The fiat money, leveraged finance Western financial system went global in the last twenty years, providing an epic rise in asset prices (and the debt used to purchase them). There’s no doubt that real goods and services have traded hands with world growth.
July 3rd, 2009 | Dan Denning | 9 comments | Continued
In 1930…as in 2009…the Average Fellow Thought the Crisis had Passed
“I see the publishers association has chosen a ’20s theme,” began the emcee. “What is wrong with you people? Don’t you know what came after the ’20s? The ’30s!”
It doesn’t seem like the ’30s…yet. Ask the man on the street and he will tell you what he’s heard on TV: the worst of the crisis is over.
Bernie Madoff and the SEC
But all the papers seem delighted. “Locked up for Life!” says one of today’s headlines. The judge “threw the book at him,” says another. His victims wanted him to get no mercy. The judge gave him none, imposing the maximum sentence.
July 1st, 2009 | Bill Bonner | 2 comments | Continued
Superannuation Raiding Party Being Formed II
Super funds represent a pool of capital the government doesn’t have to borrow on the international bond market. Of course, technically the super money is your money. But if Henry is up to what we think he’s up to, your money could soon be financing government-backed infrastructure projects or participating in corporate bond auctions. You can imagine the super industry would do these things anyway, if they seemed like good investments…
June 15th, 2009 | Dan Denning | 10 comments | Continued
Crash, Depression, Hyperinflation – the Triple Crown of Financial Catastrophes
It is remarkable enough that we have been able to witness a genuine market crash. The crash of ’87 barely counts. It sent prices down as much as a third all around the world. But it was a very short-lived affair. Bread put in the oven at the beginning of it was still doughy when it was over. Then, it kept rising for the next 20 years.
June 11th, 2009 | Bill Bonner | 0 comments | Continued
Rio Scraps Deal to Sell to Aluminium Corporation of China
So what now? Well, the Chinalco bid came at the bottom of the market. Things are a bit better now. And shareholders seem eager to provide the needed capital rather than bringing on board a suitor whose intentions are at best, opaque.
June 5th, 2009 | Dan Denning | 0 comments | Continued
Subprime Meltdown Has About Run its Course
“But not to worry,” borrowers were told. “Betting on ever-rising home prices is the safest wager in the whole wide world. If you have problems with cash flow when the ARM resets, your house will be worth a lot more, so you can simply sell it and walk away with a nice chunk of change in your pocket.”
June 4th, 2009 | Doug Hornig | 8 comments | Continued
Trends Make Investors Less Afraid of Risk
But on March 9, 2009, came a lull. Reluctantly, investors came out of their storm shelters. The skies lightened…the sun shined. Oil has gone up 53% since then. Stocks worldwide are up about 30%.
And now…people say “the worst is behind us.”
June 4th, 2009 | Bill Bonner | 4 comments | Continued
Geithner Reassures China that America Takes Financial Obligations Seriously
So Geithner is in China, hat in hand, like a major debtor called into the bank president’s office. Geithner, of course, has no choice. He has to go…and say what he has to say. He will use all the right words. He will show the appropriate seriousness…
June 3rd, 2009 | Bill Bonner | 0 comments | Continued
GM Insolvency Can’t be Run-of-the-mill
GM is owned by wealthy politicians in Washington who, under threat of imprisonment, forced their constituents to finance the deal. Insinuating the public has any control is “Orwellian in the extreme” Addison suggested when we discussed the matter late Friday. Amen.
June 2nd, 2009 | Ian Mathias | 0 comments | Continued
Deal With Bondholders Cleared the Way for GM Bankruptcy
Too bad about GM. It was set up in 1916. If it had been able to hold together for another 7 years, it would have gone 100 years without having to declare bankruptcy.
All people die. All companies die, too. That’s why ‘buy and hold’ is wishful thinking. Buy and hold long enough and you are sure to go broke. And die.
Investors Feel They Can Put Their Money into Treasuries and Not Worry
But maybe they should spare a thought or two about what is really going on. Lending money to the US government is no sure thing. Far from it. In fact, under the present circumstances, lending money to the feds is asking for trouble. Recently, you could put your money in T-bills and get zero yield. “An extraordinary thing…” said Warren Buffett…
May 28th, 2009 | Bill Bonner | 4 comments | Continued
Gold Headed Higher and the New Bubble in the US Treasury Market
It looks to us as though gold is headed to $1,000 again…maybe higher. This is not what we expected… Not yet anyway.
What we still expect is a broad, long rally in stock prices. We think the Dow might go back to 10,000 before it is over. This is the rebound we were waiting for.


