Greece and Ireland have become the litmus test for whether economies will be sacrificed in attempts to pay debts that cannot be paid. An interregnum is threatened during which the road to default and permanent austerity will carve out more…
The title of the latest crisis book is “Reckless Endangerment”. Authors Grechen Morgenstern and Josh Rosner sat down with Aaron Task at Yahoo’s Tech Ticker to review the role of the regulators in our crisis. Theirs is a story of regulatory…
The financial repression that is being discussed is not in developing countries but in the advanced industrialized countries. The ostensible goal is to support the government bond markets. Moral suasion, the cajoling of investors are soft…
The Federal Reserve will be on easy street for a long time to come. Real interest rates will remain low, meaning debtors will be favoured over savers. Investors in fixed–income will take it on the chin.
While the tightening of global financial conditions is likely in part a trigger for the recent unwind of positioning, the de-leveraging of this extended positioning in equities, commodities and currencies, therefore, is the likely the cause…
"I don't want to see unemployment this high," Thomas Hoenig says. "But I also don't want to see it this high three or four years from now following another crisis because we were so impatient. That's a very hard trade-off and it's very…
So, the Fed has basically just announced it will stop QE2. It will then start selling Treasuries. And remember, this is at the same time the Treasury is selling $10 billion a month in mortgage securities. Only after this will rates be…
While many of our readers may not be particularly interested in Norway, two of our Casey Report investment picks are in the country - hence the quick update on the Norges Bank's (the Norwegian Central Bank) rate decision.
Financial repression leads to investors' leveraging up, moving abroad, moving out on the risk curve or moving into riskier asset classes. Apparently, Pimco is employing all of these strategies. Will it work, though? I say greater risk…