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
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
A government bond is really a promise that the government will steal enough money to pay the interest and principle. Investors don’t doubt its willingness. They doubt its ability.
November 3rd, 2011 | Bill Bonner | 0 comments | Continued
“Hooray” for democracy.
From out of the blue, Greek president George Papandreou has called a referendum on the Greek debt situation and whether Greece should accept the terms of the financial and political surrender imposed on it by the “Troika” of interventionists from the International Monetary Fund (IMF), the European Union (EU), and the European Central Bank (ECB).
November 2nd, 2011 | Dan Denning | 3 comments | Continued
The growth of the current financial bubble is easily seen in the growth of the total debt, as a proportion of the size of the economy: simply track the ratio of total-debt to GDP.
June 9th, 2010 | Dr. David Evans | 2 comments | Continued
According to the Bank for International Settlements, the US’s structural deficit – the amount of our deficit adjusted for the economic cycle – has increased from 3.1%…
June 2nd, 2010 | Dave Einhorn | 0 comments | Continued
Governments and central banks have managed to engineer some more spin, but only at the expense of piling more debt on top of the already wobbling structure.
March 6th, 2010 | Nickolai Hubble | 2 comments | Continued
But as we’ve said before, the rally in the U.S. dollar and in U.S. sovereign debt is driven more by a preference for short-term liquidity than anything else. You can tell this is true because for longer-dated bonds, demand is weak. No one wants to lend to the Nation State for 30 years anymore.
February 24th, 2010 | Dan Denning | 2 comments | Continued
We wondered if any of them really were essential. Surely, not the fellows who are watching after the African horned beetle…
February 9th, 2010 | Bill Bonner | 2 comments | Continued
Another day, another country looks to be heading towards bankruptcy.
Greece was last night downgraded by ratings agency Fitch from A- to BBB+ and was placed on negative credit watch. That means there could be more downgrades to come.
The Greek budget deficit is currently 12% of GDP.
December 9th, 2009 | Murray Dawes | 3 comments | Continued
All major governments of the West – and Japan – are now borrowing as if their lives depended on it.
November 30th, 2009 | Bill Bonner | 0 comments | Continued
Let’s see, in the 1980s Japan’s corporate leaders thought they were going to take over the world. Investors thought so too. They expanded. They wheeled. They dealed. Prices shot up and they all thought they were geniuses.
November 13th, 2009 | Bill Bonner | 13 comments | Continued
For at least a thousand years, the business cycle went round and round without help from central bankers or economists. It is only since these geniuses have been on the case that really serious problems have arisen.
November 2nd, 2009 | Bill Bonner | 4 comments | Continued
And that assumes there is no big increase in interest rates…and that the economy recovers as planned. If either of those things fails to happen, the situation will degrade fast.
October 26th, 2009 | Bill Bonner | 0 comments | Continued
“The future will be a total disaster, with a collapse of our capitalistic system as we know it today, wars, massive government debt defaults and the impoverishment of large segments of Western society,”
October 1st, 2009 | Bill Bonner | 9 comments | Continued