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Preparing Your Finances for 2012By Syndicated Publisher on December 31, 2011 | 105 Comments
It’s hard to believe that 2011 has passed so quickly and that 2012 will soon be here. Now is a good time to look back over the past year and assess your finances. Did your choices this year put you in better or worse circumstances? Do you have the information needed to make wise decisions in t... -
ECRI Growth Index Stalls For Seven Weeks.By Syndicated Publisher on December 31, 2011 | 64 Comments
The Weekly Leading Index (WLI) growth indicator of the Economic Cycle Research Institute (ECRI) posted -7.6 in its latest reading, data through December 23. The latest public data point is virtually unchanged from last week’s -7.7. The index has been hovering in a narrow range between -7.4 to ... -
Thursday Market Review: Credit Market DivergencesBy Syndicated Publisher on December 30, 2011 | No Comments
Without sounding too redundant the equity trade right now is divided between two camps. It is either a credit event trade or a simple consolidation where price is setting up for a new leg higher in the coming months. If you read various market analysis I would argue that the vast majority view this ... -
Part III: The Stock Market Is Not Physics.By Syndicated Publisher on December 30, 2011 | 1 Comment
Although originally published in 2004, the valuable series has been re-released in the Independent Investor eBook, along with over 100 pages of other reports that challenge conventional economic thinking. The following series is excerpted from two classic issues of Robert Prechter’s Elliott W... -
2012: No Apocalypse Will Be A Win!By Syndicated Publisher on December 29, 2011 | 56 Comments
It’s that time of year again when we do our best to put our best “guessing hat” on as to what the new year may bring in terms of the economy, the markets and the world. This is a preview of the full report that will be released this coming weekend. To access the full report si... -
ECB LTRO Won’t Stop Contagion.By Syndicated Publisher on December 29, 2011 | 85 Comments
Bond action in the Eurozone has modestly picked up (yields steady or falling) since the ECB’s 3-Year LTRO program – Long Term Refinance Operation. However, European banks still do not trust each other, not even for overnight lending. Instead, banks park all available funds with the ECB, ... -
Technical Update: Currencies and Commodities SplinterBy Syndicated Publisher on December 29, 2011 | 56 Comments
One of the most important elements of entering a longer term trade is understanding why you are doing such. Price will go higher or lower alone is not sufficient. You need to understand the basis for such movement in price. That way as the trade evolves you can begin to understand if your thesis is ... -
Recession Crazes.By Syndicated Publisher on December 29, 2011 | 67 Comments
Recession is a four-letter word in the financial markets, striking terror into the hearts of everyone. And if reports since August are to be believed, there is a recession hiding behind every tree. For a myriad of reasons, economists have argued we are due to plunge into the next one any day now... -
The Corporate Cash MythBy Syndicated Publisher on December 28, 2011 | No Comments
The below article is taken from the December 2011 edition of The Euro Pacific Capital Global Investor Newsletter. For full access to the rest of the newsletter articles, click here. A central theme that has absolutely permeated the coverage of the Great Recession is that over the past few year... -
Long Bond Yield: How Low Can It Go?.By Syndicated Publisher on December 28, 2011 | No Comments
The 30-year bond yield has dropped below three percent many times this year, dropping as low as 2.694% in October. It has been trending up since then, but today it looks as if the October low could be retested. ————————– (Decision Point subscrib... -
China: Lots Of News, But Nothing New.By Syndicated Publisher on December 28, 2011 | 61 Comments
Two weeks ago on Wednesday night, after the Chinese markets closed, the People’s Bank of China announced that it had cut the minimum reserve requirement by 50 basis points to 21% for the large banks, and lower for the smaller banks. With the announcement coming just hours before announcements... -
Chickens Come Home To Roost At Sears.By Syndicated Publisher on December 28, 2011 | 80 Comments
In January of 2009 (nearly three years ago, which is ironic), I went bearish on Sears due to a variety of reasons, the least of which was less than competent management (hedge fund managers don’t necessarily make good department store managers), macro conditions and fundamentals sloped towards...
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