The European Debt Crisis and Your Investments

A look back on 18 months of analysis and reports on the European Credit Crisis

By Elliott Wave International

In 1999, 11 European countries surrendered their currencies for the euro and a shared monetary authority. Barely a decade later, the once-celebrated EU is in the midst of a credit crisis and its currency is facing collapse.

Elliott Wave International’s analysts have been anticipating and tracking the credit contagion across the European nations for the past two years. EWI subscribers were first alerted to the still-developing European debt crisis back in December 2009.

The following is excerpted from a December 2010 report from The European Debt Crisis, a new report from EWI. This free report provides important analysis from February 2010 through today that helps you understand what the European economic crisis can mean for your investments. Plus, you’ll get a unique perspective on what’s ahead. Find out how to access this free report below.

The Credit Crisis Spreads — December 2010
The credit crisis is escalating as expected. Back in January 2010, when ratings agency Moody’s bestowed “investment grade” status on a widely followed index of sovereign bonds, The European Financial Forecast argued that a renewed Primary-degree decline would in fact aim the credit crisis directly at this critical new realm. Our case for the looming sovereign debt debacle rested primarily on two pieces of evidence: (1) Primary wave 3 (circled) had begun in Europe’s peripheral markets, and (2) premiums for credit-default swaps on European sovereigns (think of an insurance policy against a national default) were already signaling the next phase of the crisis by surpassing their 2008-09 price extremes. The February 2010 issue of EFF published a chart showing rising Greek, Spanish and Italian swaps and offered this description of how Europe’s credit crunch would escalate: “The theme during Primary wave 1 (circled) was default at the individual, corporate and quasi-government level. The theme for Primary wave 3 (circled) will be default at the sovereign level.”

Today, the credit crunch is clearly angling itself away from mere corporations and toward whole countries. On November 15, Bloomberg announced the escalation with this headline:

Companies Safer Than Sovereigns as
Crisis Cracks ‘Old Order’

— Bloomberg, November 15, 2010

London credit strategist Greg Venizelos tells Bloomberg that the “old order” was the one where investors believed large sovereign nations to be better credit risks than corporate borrowers. However, debt is being repriced, he says, and today “corporates are now better credit quality than sovereigns in the periphery.” Indeed, swaps on Italian government bonds are more expensive than 75% of the Italian companies contained in the iTraxx Europe Index of European corporations. In Spain, traders deem Spanish sovereign debt to be riskier than all six Spanish companies in the index. Even in the supposedly safe core European country of France, 5-year swaps tied to French government bonds climbed to an all-time high of 105 basis points in November. At that level, more than half of the 25 French companies in the iTraxx index trade tighter than the French sovereign, according to Bloomberg.

The chart above shows another way to view the escalation of the credit crisis. By plotting the difference, or “spread,” between swaps on European corporations versus those on European sovereigns, the rising line shows derivative traders’ increasing fear over sovereign default relative to corporate borrowers. So, yes, the old order of safer sovereigns is over. But notice, too, that the debt crisis began escalating when the continent’s peripheral markets started topping way back in October 2009. The billion-euro question is, “Who is next?” The media is clearly focusing on Portugal, as 5-year credit default swaps tied to Portuguese bonds are setting all-time records. But charts show that so too are swaps tied to Spanish and Italian bonds. Five-year swaps on Belgian debt also reached an all-time high last month. Either one of these countries could be next. Maybe they’ll all go down together, but in the larger scheme of things, it doesn’t matter. The most important thing to observe is that even core European countries like France and Germany exhibit spiking default insurance premiums, too. These countries are the largest contributors to the �440 billion Facility, the same one that backstops the rest of Europe.

The June 2010 European Financial Forecast said unequivocally that before the storm is over, “at least one, but more likely several, G8 nations will capsize.” We stand by our forecast.

The European Debt Crisis is affecting investments across the globe. Gain a valuable perspective on the European debt crisis and get ahead of what is yet to come in this FREE resource from Elliott Wave International.

Read Your Free Report Now: The European Debt Crisis and Your Investments.

This article was syndicated by Elliott Wave International and was originally published under the headline The European Debt Crisis and Your Investments. EWI is the world’s largest market forecasting firm. Its staff of full-time analysts led by Chartered Market Technician Robert Prechter provides 24-hour-a-day market analysis to institutional and private investors around the world.

 

 

Why Silver For A Monetary Collapse? Part 2

By Hubert Moolman

In part 1, I stated:

We are at the edge of a major economic crisis. Our monetary system is the underlying cause of this major crisis. The massive debt bubble created by our monetary system is about to burst. The demonetization of gold and silver, has over the years diverted value from these metals, to all paper assets (such as bonds) linked to the debt-based monetary system.

The process of the devaluation of gold and silver, started by the demonetization of gold and silver, is about to reverse at a greater speed than ever before. This is similar to what happened during the late 70s, when the gold and silver price increased significantly. However, what happened in the 70’s was just a prelude to this coming rally. The 70’s was the end of a cycle, this is likely the end of a major cycle; an end of an era of the debt-based monetary system (dishonest money).

What this debt-based monetary system has done, is to create what I call a “mirror-effect”, whereby, silver (and gold) is pushed down in value, to a similar extent as to which paper assets such as general stocks are pushed up in value. This mirror-effect clearly shows up on the long-term charts of gold, silver and the Dow.

Here (in part 2), I would like to show how this “mirror effect” of silver versus the assets linked to the debt-based monetary system (general stocks in this case), shows up on the long-term charts. This “mirror effect”, also reveals an interesting cycle, which provides more evidence to support my view, of the impending judgment of this system (monetary system), in terms of standards according to the Holy Scripture.

Below, is a long–term silver chart (real and nominal) from 1850 to present (generated at minefund.com):

real price of silver

MineFund’s real precious metals prices are deflated by U.S. consumer price inflation (Consumer Price Index-All Urban Consumers, not seasonally adjusted, January 2011 = 100).

I have drawn a vertical red line, approximately where silver was demonetized (1870s). Notice how the real price of silver collapsed after the red line, from about $30, until it bottomed in 1931 at $4.29. It then traded side-ways (from the big-picture view) for many years, until it spiked from about the early 1970s, making a peak in 1980, where after, it bottomed again in 2001.

Technically, the bottom in 2001 was the completion of what would be a remarkable double bottom reversal, with the first bottom being in 1931. After a double bottom formation, there is often a big rally, and that is exactly what happened next. If this pattern continues to follow the pattern of a valid double bottom, it will reach levels that will exceed the 1980 high by at least one multiple, but probably by many more.

However, the purpose of this article is not to deal with targets. The interesting thing about this possible double bottom is the fact that the two bottoms came 70 years apart. This 70 years period also appears on the long-term Dow chart. Below is a Dow chart (from stockcharts.com) from 1900 to present:

DOW long-term chart

On the chart, I have indicated a 70 year period from when the Dow peaked in 1929, to the peak in 1999. The reason for using the 1999 peak instead of the 2007 peak, is the fact that the 1999 peak represents the real peak, since the Dow/Gold peaked in 1999 (like it did in 1929).

Notice the dates of the peaks and how they fit in with that of the bottoms of the real silver price, as well as the similar 70 year periods between. In my opinion, the occurrence of the 70 year period on both charts, in the context as explained above, provides additional evidence of the link between silver’s demonetization (or suppression) and the massive debt bubble of this century – as explained in part 1 of this article.

While the Dow is inflated to the peak in 1929, silver is suppressed to its low in 1931. And again, the Dow is inflated to its peak in 1999, while silver is suppressed to its bottom in 2001.

So, the peaks and troughs, as presented in the above charts, are the manifestation (in visual form) of the debt-based monetary system causing paper and related assets to rise, while suppressing silver. Another way of looking at it is that the debt-based monetary system is fuelling speculation in paper assets by using energy diverted from precious metals. THIS IS THE REAL MANIPULATION OF GOLD AND SILVER – it is in the open.

Silver (like gold) stands in direct opposition to the current monetary system (they are inescapably linked). The fall (and falling) of this system is the rise of silver as money; therefore, massive increases in what silver can buy in real terms.

Update on the silver pattern presented in my previous article

In my previous article on silver, I presented the following graphic that compares the silver chart from 2007 to today, to the gold chart from 2008 to 2010 (all charts generated at fxstreet.com):

silver price forecast

It seems that silver has now made that low at point 12 (note, there is still a possibility of a retest). Price is now looking to break out of the down-trend since September (point 7). If silver continues to follow gold’s pattern above, we could see new all-time highs over the coming months.

For more of this kind of analysis on silver and gold, you are welcome to subscribe to my free newsletter or premium service. I have also recently completed a fractal analysis report for gold and silver – more detail on my website.

Warm regards and God bless,

Hubert

http://hubertmoolman.wordpress.com/

[email protected]

“And it shall come to pass, that whosoever shall call on the name of the Lord shall be saved”

 

 

Forex CT 11-1-12 Video News Update & Outlook

Video courtesy of ForexCT – A leading Australian forex broker, liscensed by the Australian Securities & Investments Commission, offers the MetaTrader4 and PROfit Platform to retail traders. Other services include Segregated Accounts, Trading workshops, Tutorials, and Commodities trading.

EUR Sees Mild Gains in Slow News Day

Source: ForexYard

Riskier currencies like the euro saw mild gains in trading on Tuesday, as investors eagerly await euro-zone news set to be released on Thursday and Friday. Debt auctions from Italy and Spain, as well as the European Central Bank’s interest rate decision are forecasted to generate heavy volatility for the rest of the week.

Economic News

USD – USD Falls against Riskier Currencies

The US dollar took slight losses against most of its main currency rivals on Tuesday, as investors continue to unload some of their short USD positions following an increase in risk-taking. This is largely due to meetings between European leaders which many are hoping will lead to a plan to combat the euro-zone debt crisis. That being said, the overwhelming market sentiment is for a bullish dollar. The EUR/USD is still trading below the 1.3000 level and analysts are warning that the pair could stay there for some time.

Traders should note that the dollar’s upward momentum is being driven by poor euro-zone news. Investors view the USD as a safe-haven currency and often turn to it in times of economic uncertainty, often at the expense of riskier currencies like the euro and British pound. It is for this reason that the rest of the week’s euro-zone news may create heavy market volatility. Any negative news is likely to benefit the USD. Conversely, if any plans to boost the euro-zone economies are unveiled, the dollar could slip against its main currency rivals.

EUR – Risk Taking Benefits Euro

Investors took meetings between European leaders and the IMF as a sign that a plan to help combat the euro-zone debt crisis may soon be unveiled. As a result, riskier currencies like the euro, Australian dollar and British pound saw mild gains on Tuesday. Analysts are warning that these gains may prove to be insignificant in the long run, and that the market is still overwhelmingly in favor of the safe-haven US dollar. Evidence of this can be seen in the EUR/USD, which failed to break the psychologically significant 1.3000 barrier yesterday.

Turning to today, a slow news day once again means that any information out of the euro-zone is likely to dictate the direction markets take. Italian and Spanish debt auctions scheduled for later in the week, as well as the European Central Bank decision on interest rates are forecasted to generate heavy market volatility.

Positive news out of the euro-zone may prove to be highly beneficial for the common currency. At the same time, analysts are saying that the EUR/USD has the potential to drop to the 1.2600 level, should the EU fail to come up with a credible solution to the current crisis.

CAD – Loonie Moves Up vs. USD amid Risk Taking

The Canadian dollar saw some fairly substantial gains against its American counterpart in trading on Tuesday. The loonie was bolstered following meetings between euro-zone leaders which led to risk taking among investors. The CAD, which is largely linked to commodity and equity prices, tends to move up following positive euro-zone news.

Whether the CAD will be able to maintain its gains today is still unknown. The euro-zone situation is still extremely fragile. Any news that creates doubt in the European economic recovery could cause the loonie to reverse course. Furthermore, should the euro-zone crisis worsen, the CAD is likely to turn bearish extremely quickly.

Crude Oil – Crude Once Again Bullish Ahead of Euro-Zone News

Crude oil saw some significant gains in trading on Tuesday, as risk taking among investor bolstered the commodity. Prices once again were above $103 a barrel, as optimistic euro-zone news sent investors toward commodities.

Additionally, increasing tensions between Iran and the west drove oil prices higher. Supply side fears tend to drive up prices, and analysts are now warning that oil could reach as high as $105 a barrel unless something is done to calm the situation in the Middle East.

Turning to today, crude oil may continue to trade higher if rumors of a plan to combat the euro-zone crisis dominate the headlines. Traders will want to pay attention to any announcements from European leaders for indications about what direction oil will take.

Technical News

EUR/USD

Technical indicators on the daily chart place this currency pair in the oversold zone, indicating that an upward correction may take place in the near future. A bullish cross is forming on the Stochastic Slow, while the Williams Percent Range is right around the -90 level. Going long in your positions may be a wise choice.

GBP / USD

Indicators on the weekly chart are showing a possible upward correction for this pair may take place. The Relative Strength Index is drifting toward the oversold zone, while the Williams Percent Range is already below the -90 level. Traders may want to go long in their positions.

USD / JPY

Most long-term technical indicators are showing this pair trading in neutral territory, meaning that a clear trend has yet to present itself. Traders are advised to take a wait-and-see approach with their trades until a clearer picture develops.

USD / CHF

After spiking in trading last week, technical indicators are showing possible bearish movement for this pair in the near future. The daily chart’s Stochastic Slow has formed a bearish cross, while the Relative Strength Index is hovering in the overbought zone. Traders may want to go short in their positions.

The Wild Card

Gold

Technical indicators are showing that gold may see downward movement in trading today. The 8-hour chart’s Williams Percent Range is currently at -10 and pointing down, which typically means that bearish movement is on the horizon. In addition, the daily chart’s Relative Strength Index is approaching the overbought zone.

Forex traders may want to go short in their positions today.

Forex Market Analysis provided by ForexYard.

© 2006 by FxYard Ltd

Disclaimer: Trading Foreign Exchange carries a high level of risk and may not be suitable for all investors. There is a possibility that you could sustain a loss of all of your investment and therefore you should not invest money that you cannot afford to lose. You should be aware of all the risks associated with Foreign Exchange trading.

 

Royal Bank of Scotland To Close Cash Equities Unit

Bloomberg reports, citing the Times of London that due to small and irregular profits, Royal Bank of Scotland (NYSE:RBS) has plans to close its cash and equities unit.The Times also notes that the bank hasn’t found a buyer for the whole equities unit, Jeffries (NYSE:JEF), Oriel Securities and Numis Corp are interested in buying Hoare Govett, its small corporate equities broking division.Royal Bank of Scotland is currently below its 50-day moving average (MA) of $6.70 and below its 200-day MA of $9.86.

Central Bank of Sri Lanka Continues to Hold at 7.00%

The Central Bank of Sri Lanka held its benchmark repurchase rate steady at 7.00%, and reverse repurchase rate at 8.50%, and Statutory Reserve Ratio at 8%.  The Bank said: “the significant structural changes that have taken place in the Sri Lankan economy over the last several years are expected to provide the momentum for the economy to grow by about 8 per cent in 2012, even in the midst of the slowdown in global economic activity. Continued development efforts aimed at improving economic and social infrastructure  are expected to augment the productive capacity of the country and thereby enable the realisation of the country’s growth potential.”

Sri Lanka’s central bank also kept its monetary policy settings unchanged at its December meeting last year, while the Bank last cut its key interest rates in January last year.  Sri Lanka reported an annual headline inflation rate of 4.7% in November, down from 6.4% in September, 7% in August, 7.5% in July, 7.1% in June, and 8.2% in May.  

Sri Lanka had targeted 8.5% GDP growth in 2011, after its economy expanded 8% in 2010.  Sri Lanka reported 8.2% annual GDP growth in the second quarter (7.9% in Q1).  
The Sri Lankan Rupee (LKR) last traded around 114 against the US dollar.  The Central Bank of Sri Lanka next meets on the 9th of February 2012.

The Brave New (Broken) World for Stock Traders and Investors

By MoneyMorning.com.au

I’ve said it before, and I’ll say it again.

The markets are broken.

It’s not that they’re not functioning on a daily basis, pricing risk and assets and performing their price discovery duties. They are doing that – or at least trying to.

Those are the little, daily things that markets do, and there are things there that are broken. (I’ll get to those things another time.) Think of those little things as the “hows” or the “mechanics” of buying and selling.

Think of the big things as the “whys” or the “psychology of investing.” Those are the things that are broken. Until they are fixed, or “things” change, drastically, we are in for some really wild swings in the months, quarters, and years ahead.

No More Buy-and-Hold Believers

First, there are two types of players in markets, stock traders and investors.

It used to be that investors dwarfed stock traders – by a huge margin.

Investors were the meat and potatoes and the vegetables, and stock traders were the gravy that made sure investors’ plates were liquid enough so that they didn’t choke when swallowing their meals.

But that’s all changed.

There aren’t that many truly long-term investors any more. It’s too dangerous to be an investor in the traditional sense. That’s why most investors, at least those that call themselves investors, are really all traders now.

I don’t mean traders in the high frequency sense, or even in the day trading sense. I mean they are stock traders because they invest for the future but can’t see beyond a few quarters, if that, so they have to get out of positions.

These traditional investors almost always have stop-loss orders down, or at least have stop-loss levels in mind as part of their investment “plans.” A lot of them now use profit targets, too. That hardly ever happened traditionally. Investors invested. They were buy-and-hold believers in a brighter future where, over time, assets appreciated, and they stuck with them.

Not anymore.

You can’t do that unless you have nerves of steel, tons of capital, and a generational approach to holding your positions. Even then, I say, good luck with that.

So, from the perspective of psychology, if it’s not safe to be an investor, but being in the markets is still a tremendous wealth-generating endeavour, stock trading will remain the tail wagging the old dog.

For me, that’s all well and good. I’m a stock market trader. I always have been. Sure, I used to have a bunch of long-term investments that I expected to always weather short-term trading and fluctuating economic cycles.

But those all ended up being a 50/50 proposition. Meaning I lost on about half of those investments and made money on the other half. I’m talking about maybe eight positions that I’d keep on the books for years.

Not anymore.

Why? Now I use that capital to trade bigger positions, because holding a diversified (I’m not including the few mutual funds that I used to own, that I jettisoned a long time ago) portfolio, even a well-constructed, concentrated one, didn’t work out.

My point is, think about how you look at the stock markets. Ask yourself if you are an investor or a stock trader. Ask yourself how much time you have, how much capital you have, and what kind of constitution you have… and do the math yourself.

Shah Gilani is a veteran US hedge fund trader and contributing editor to Money Morning (USA).

Publisher’s Note: This is an edited version of an article originally published in the US edition of Money Morning (www.moneymorning.com)

From the Archives…

A Story of Sell-Offs & Super Spikes by a Stock Market Trader
2012-01-07 – Murray Dawes

Why BHP Will Be the First Victim of China’s Economic Collapse
2012-01-06 – Kris Sayce

The Sun Starts to Set on China’s Economy
2012-01-05 – Kris Sayce

New Year’s Eve 2029: Will the Australian Stock Market Lose a Decade of Growth?
2012-01-03 – Kris Sayce

How to Buy Gold and Silver
2011-12-11 – Dr Alex Cowie

For editorial enquiries and feedback, email [email protected]


The Brave New (Broken) World for Stock Traders and Investors

Let’s Even Things Up For the Individual Investor

By MoneyMorning.com.au

You may have seen a strange ad in yesterday’s subscription version of Money Morning.

It began, “Are you interested in investigating insider trading, suspicious volume spikes, and price sensitive announcements?”

The ad appears in today’s subscription version of Money Morning too. (For your free subscription click here). Read it. And if you’re interested, send a cover letter and CV to [email protected].

We’re always looking to find ways to help you make money.


And our gut feeling is this is one way to do it. Like it or not, there are some stock traders and investors who act on confidential inside information. Of course, that’s illegal… and that’s NOT what we’re looking to do.

What we ARE looking for is whether a switched-on guy or gal can analyse this hard-to-find info and generate profitable trading ideas from it.

Australia is one of the least transparent share markets in the world. For example, according to research firm Morningstar, Australia’s funds industry ranks 14th out of 16 in the developed world in terms of disclosure.

Investors often have no idea what shares, bonds, or other assets their funds own, or how risky those assets are.

Our aim is to break open the industry stranglehold on price-sensitive info… and put it to use for you. Or at least see if it’s possible.

There’s certainly a lot of work to do. In a three month period in late 2010, ASIC generated nearly 20,000 alerts flagging suspicious trades.

Australia is almost the last share market in the world where some investors have a big information advantage over others. Let’s see if we can even things up a bit for the individual investor.

Cheers.
Kris


Let’s Even Things Up For the Individual Investor

The Fed’s Funny Money Merry Go Round

By MoneyMorning.com.au

We feel like we’ve been here before.

This morning, Bloomberg News reports:

“Stocks surged, sending the Standard & Poor’s 500 Index to the highest level in five months, and commodities rose for a third day amid speculation China may act to spur growth.”

Part of the reason was due to “good” news from U.S. aluminium producer, Alcoa [NYSE: AA]. According to Bloomberg, “Sales rose 6 percent to $5.99 billion, topping the $5.7 billion estimate in a Bloomberg survey.”

The company still made a loss. But that didn’t stop the shares piling on 4.5% during the day’s trade.

So, the future looks bright for stocks. Which must mean the U.S. economy and the Fed is in good shape too… or does it?


Because Bloomberg also reports:

“Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco President John Williams said he sees a ‘strong’ case for more Fed purchases of mortgage bonds given his expectation that inflation will fall below 1.5 percent this year.”

So which is it? The economy is picking up… or it’s not… or it is, but not enough?

The answer is, we have seen this before.

The Seeds of Recovery

It’s recovery by stimulus… which isn’t really a recovery at all.

It’s like the PM saying Australia has a healthy car industry, while at the same time announcing the government is giving Ford Australia $34 million of taxpayer money… on top of a $103 million bailout from Ford Australia’s U.S. parent company.

And Holden gets a hand out too. $100 million of taxpayer money… that’ll teach you not to buy a Ford or Holden… because you’re paying for one anyway! And those who did buy Ford or Holden are paying for an already expensive car twice.

But we’ll have more on the madness of subsidies another day…

What we’re going through now is a repeat of the “Seeds of Recovery” mantra. The market last fell for this trick in 2009 and 2010.

Investors thought they saw things improving but forgot it was the delayed impact of central bank and government stimulus. So they bought stocks, believing the good times were back.

Only they weren’t. Soon enough the stimulus wore off and investors were back to square one.

So it seems the Fed’s John Williams knows what will happen next if the Fed doesn’t print more money to buy more assets. He knows the economy will head south and mainstream investors will lose all faith in the Fed.

But at the moment, the Fed and U.S. Treasury money-go-round goes on…

Not-So-Funny Money

Today the Financial Times reports:

“The US Federal Reserve sent $76.9bn in profits to the Treasury last year, according to the central bank’s preliminary results, showing how the Fed’s unconventional monetary policy has turned it in to the most profitable bank in history.”

The FT goes on – oblivious to the obvious:

“As part of its efforts to support the economy, the Fed has bought billions of dollars in Treasury securities to drive down long-term interest rates. The Fed earns interest of more than 1 per cent on many of those securities while it pays only 25 basis points to banks on their reserves. The difference allows it to record large profits which it remits to the Treasury.”

Profit for the Fed means profits for the U.S. Treasury, right? Wrong! It’s a funny-money merry-go-round. Think about who pays the Fed 1% interest. That’s right, the U.S. Treasury.

And because the Fed pays out 0.25% to banks for cash held on deposit, it can only give 0.75% (less expenses) back to the U.S. Treasury. Which means the Treasury makes a loss on the deal. Keep doing that over and over and it’s the surest way to Loserville.

But this is the muddle-headed world we live in. Where profits are losses… and a healthy industry is only healthy because it gets millions in taxpayer support.

For now the market loves any so-called good news it can get. If that means stocks going up due to an aluminium producer losing money… China providing more stimulus… and the U.S. Federal Reserve printing more money, then so be it.

But as we’ve seen before, this isn’t a recipe for a long-term rally.

Our message today is the same as before Christmas: Keep your safe money safe, and only punt with money you can afford to lose. Because this is still one heck of a risky market.

Cheers.
Kris

Publisher’s note: The brand new Slipstream Trader stock market video update recorded live this morning is now on YouTube. To watch it, click this stock market update video link. Murray says he’s in “observation mode” right now. Why? He told us earlier: “US markets are in short and intermediate uptrend but long term downtrend. They are quickly approaching large overhead resistance around 1300 in the S+P 500…

“How the market behaves near there is important.” Says Murray. “If it gets rejected once again and we see some weakness I can become aggressively bearish again. If it busts up through 1330ish then I will have to reassess my strong bearish stance. The ASX 200 is also flirting with the key 4200 level again. If it can hold above there we may see a short term spike higher. Another rejection from 4200 and a close below the 10 day moving average will increase my bearish conviction…” To listen to Murray explain all this in greater detail, click on the following link to watch his brand new stock market video update.

Related Articles

Special Report: Six Extraordinary Resource Investment Opportunities for 2012

The Sovereign Debt Cycle Continues

Paul Krugman is Dead Wrong: US Debt Does Matter

From the Archives…

A Story of Sell-Offs & Super Spikes by a Stock Market Trader
2012-01-07 – Murray Dawes

Why BHP Will Be the First Victim of China’s Economic Collapse
2012-01-06 – Kris Sayce

The Sun Starts to Set on China’s Economy
2012-01-05 – Kris Sayce

New Year’s Eve 2029: Will the Australian Stock Market Lose a Decade of Growth?
2012-01-03 – Kris Sayce

How to Buy Gold and Silver
2011-12-11 – Dr Alex Cowie

For editorial enquiries and feedback, email [email protected]


The Fed’s Funny Money Merry Go Round