The Next Phase of QE Will Shock You
• Lewrockwell.comIt's cold here in Manhattan. We've never lived in New York. And every previous visit had left us unenthusiastic.
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It's cold here in Manhattan. We've never lived in New York. And every previous visit had left us unenthusiastic.
In an interview with ET Now, Jim Rogers, commodity expert, shares his views on markets and commodities. Excerpts:
The IMF has only one legitimate purpose that I can figure out: To continually write position papers and articles silly enough to keep bloggers loaded with material for rebuttal.
A panicked response to tumbling stocks casts doubt on the pace of reform
According to United Continental, flights were temporarily grounded this morning because of computer problems. United cited "network connectivity" as the source of the problems.
Do you believe that the New York Stock Exchange shut down because of a "technical glitch" on Wednesday? At 11:32 AM on Wednesday morning, trading on the New York Stock Exchange was halted due to "internal technical issues", and it did not re
Greece defaults. The Dow plummets 350 points in one day. Ugly, ominous DEBT builds up like a giant snow cliff hanging over the economic valleys of the West.
We have explained on a number of occasions how the Federal Reserves' agents, the bullion banks (principally JPMorganChase, HSBC, and Scotia) sell uncovered shorts ("naked shorts") on the Comex (gold futures market) in order to drive down an otherwise
If you've been out and about in Manhattan over the past six weeks and you have eyes and ears, you know something's happening -- something worrisome.
If you've been out and about in Manhattan over the past six weeks and you have eyes and ears, you know something's happening -- something worrisome.
Another "Final" Chance; Majority Believe Grexit
Largest share of participants on assistance for three to four years
The American Dream of a home is slipping out of reach for millions of Americans, especially African Americans, as house sales hit a 20-year low, according to a new Harvard University study of the U.S. housing market.
Americans With Retirement Accounts Beware: If Our Government Does What China Just Did You'll Be Wiped Out
Marc Faber of the Gloom, Boom Doom Report discusses his concerns about the markets.
Over the weekend, the lines in Greece stretched along the street. Around the corner. Down the block.
When Puerto Rico hired former Detroit judge Steven Rhodes it sent a signal to creditors that one possible solution it sees is the one thing it cannot do now: declare bankruptcy.
Ideologies are mind-killers, all of them, because they are all (severely) flawed. The ideological labels which are so frequently parroted in our societies are terminology which has lost all meaning. This begins with the fact that our political/econom
President Barack Obama said the latest jobs report for the U.S. is "good," but there is still more work to do "get folks' wages and incomes to keep going up."
Yesterday over coffee, a friend of mine leaked the news that JP Morgan's private banking division here in Singapore is going to start charging negative interest rates.
Just over two years ago, at the Milken global conference, the head of Apollo Group Leon Black said that "this is an almost biblical opportunity to reap gains and sell" adding that his firm has been a net seller for the last 15 months, ending with the
New orders for U.S. factory goods fell more than expected in May on weak demand for transportation and electrical equipment, a sign that manufacturing remained mired in a soft patch.
U.S. job growth slowed in June and Americans left the labor force in droves, tempering expectations for a September interest rate hike from the Federal Reserve.
Given the way that the Wall Street Journal and its biggest client, the National Association of Realtors keep you in the dark and feed you manure, they must think you are a mushroom.
Financial experts in New York, London, and Brussels have tut-tutted Greece's economic travails as Athens considers its future with the European Union. Why did they borrow so much money? How can they ever pay it back? Do they think that much debt is
This is the question that astute investors are forced to ask themselves these days. No reasonable person believes that a system of ever-expanding debt can resolve painlessly.
United States' projected debt over the next 25 years looks a lot like Greece's over the past 25.
The world's 400 richest people lost a combined $70 billion on Monday as equity markets around the globe were hammered on fears about Greece and declines in China fueled by leveraged investors exiting the market.
In this article, I am going to share with you some statistics that prove that most Americans are completely and totally unprepared for a Greek-style economic crisis.
U.S. stocks plunged nearly 2 percent or more on Monday with the Dow and S&P 500 wiping out gains for the year on escalating tensions between Greece and its creditors.