When a blind mathematician exits the market because an ominous technical omen indicates a crash ahead, what do you make of it? Last week the whole internet was abuzz with the phrase “The Hindenburg Omen.” The “Omen” is actually a convergence of technical and momentum indicators which, when sighted, usually leads to a big market correction. Its creator Jim Miekka has used it to forecast major market tipping points.
August 24th, 2010 | Dan Denning | 18 comments | ContinuedAll Posts Tagged With: "prime minister"
Interest Rates and Inflation
And that’s the point. It is all money in the bank. There is, according to the press, a difference of opinion between Treasury and the Reserve Bank over interest rates and their proper direction.
November 3rd, 2009 | Dr. Steven Kates | 79 comments | Continued
The Big Question: What is the Aussie Gold Price Doing?
Speaking of gold, the U.S. gold price jumped up $14.10 to trade back over $900 again. It was the first time old yeller metal has traded there in three weeks. The World Gold Council reported that inflows of gold into exchange traded funds were 456 tonnes for the first quarter of the year. That compared to 321 tonnes for all of last year. ETF demand for gold is definitely one of the short-term drivers of the gold price…
April 24th, 2009 | Dan Denning | 4 comments | Continued
Is China Trying to Back its Currency With Metal?
A smattering of articles in recent weeks has highlighted the stockpiling of metals by the China State Reserves Bureau. The Bureau scarfed up 329,000 tonnes of copper in February and 375,000 tonnes in March.
April 22nd, 2009 | Dan Denning | 13 comments | Continued
The Path Towards Rampant Inflation
This weekend I’ll republish an article that I wrote for Daily Reckoning readers on Tuesday… It isn’t a four-letter word uttered by Prime Minister Kevin Rudd on TV at the weekend that continues to get everyone in a tizz. Instead it’s four-little-words that everyone is rushing to embrace. Words that define the resurgence of a failed and discredited economic theory…
March 14th, 2009 | Kris Sayce | 0 comments | Continued


