The Stock Market In Japan Is COLLAPSING
• By Michael SnyderDid you see what just happened in Japan?
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Did you see what just happened in Japan?
Do the Swiss know something the rest of us don’t?
Markets in Europe got slammed today. However, they closed off of their lows.
Markets are falling early in the European trading session.
The French government is trying to reign in its deficit by jacking up taxes, including the capital gains tax, which it wants to bring to the same level as the tax on income earned by the sweat of your brow—an old philosophical pillar of the French le
Hedge fund god Ray Dalio was on CNBC this morning, giving a long-ranging interview to Andrew Ross Sorkin.
For some time, there has been talk of a growing housing bubble in Canada.
The global recession, which started in Europe, is strengthening led by further declines in the eurozone.
Probably best if you spike your morning coffee before reading any further.
Today John Embry gave a stunning interview to King World News. In it he made some rather frightening predictions. Embry believes, “... we are in the early stages of a global ‘Weimar’ event.”
Aggressive new policy from the European Central Bank has so far failed to boost ailing euro zone business, according to surveys that showed a widening chasm between sickly France and a more resilient Germany.
The mood in financial markets turned sour Thursday after a round of disappointing economic news illustrated the scale of the global economic downturn.
A month ago we warned that loan delinquencies in Spain were bad and getting worse at a concerning rate.
BofAML's Michael Hartnett has an excellent note answering the question: Why is the equity market up so much?
Hooray, EuroLand is saved yet again. Get ready for unlimited Euro printing.
Greeted with initial fanfare by investors and economic officials, the unlimited bond-buying plan that the European Central Bank announced ran into immediate political problems in the crucial countries of Germany, Spain and Italy.
Central bankers Debating the Limits of Power in Jackson Hole are wondering what's holding back the economy.
Fantastic paragraph and sentence here from Nomura bond strategist George Goncalves
Japan’s debt-to-GDP ratio is nearly 230%, the worst of any major country in the world. Yet Japan remains the world’s largest creditor country, with net foreign assets of $3.19 trillion. In 2010, its GDP per capita was more than that of France, German
Moody's Investors Service has changed its outlook on the Aaa rating of the European Union to “negative,” warning it might downgrade the bloc if it decides to cut the ratings on the EU's 4 biggest budget backers: Germany, France, the U.K., and the Net
Mr. Vildosola is cutting his professional and financial ties with his troubled homeland. He has moved his family near Cambridge, England, where he will take the reins at a company, and transferred his savings from Spanish banks to British banks.
Germany's Constitutional Court holds the fate of the euro in its hands when it rules next week on whether a crucial euro zone financial rescue fund can go ahead.
Tucked away in this Tuscan city, the oldest bank in the world has survived the Borgias, pestilence and too many wars to count. Now, a mundane foe has proved far more dangerous: Italian government debt.
Output and new orders down at accelerated rates Near-stagnation of employment Purchasing costs fall to greatest extent since November 2009