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[Most Recent Quotes from www.kitco.com]

[Most Recent Quotes from www.kitco.com]




Prieur’s readings (November 23, 2009)

Prieur du Plessis (November 23rd, 2009) Writes:

This post provides links to a number of interesting articles I have read over the past few days that you may also enjoy.

• Paul Krugman (The New York Times): Interest rates: the phantom menace, November 20, 2009. Well, what I hear is that officials don’t trust the demand for long-term government debt, because they see it as driven by a “carry trade”: financial players borrowing cheap money short-term, and using it to buy long-term bonds. They fear that the whole thing could evaporate if long-term rates start to rise, imposing capital losses on the people doing the carry trade; this could, they believe, drive rates way up, even though this possibility doesn’t seem to be priced in by the market. What’s wrong with this picture?

• Michael Panzner (Financial Armageddon): Economists: wrong again, November 21, 2009. As if they didn’t cause enough

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Prieur’s readings (November 9, 2009)

Prieur du Plessis (November 9th, 2009) Writes:

This post provides links to a number of interesting articles I have read over the past few days that you may also enjoy.

• Business Intelligence: Marc Faber has short term concerns about commodities, says gold may drop to US$800, November 6, 2009. Marc Faber the Swiss fund manager and Gloom Boom & Doom editor said he has some short-term concerns about commodity prices including gold. He is also reluctant to invest in bonds.

• Aline van Duyn (Financial Times): Why dollar carry trade faces hidden dangers, November 7, 2009. Most investors agree that it is out there. What is less clear is how big it is, or how worried investors should be about it. The “it” in question is the dollar carry trade. This is an investment strategy that has recently been extremely profitable and as a result has become increasingly popular.

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Prieur’s readings (October 31, 2009)

Prieur du Plessis (October 31st, 2009) Writes:

This post provides links to a number of interesting articles I have read over the past few days that you may also enjoy.

• Michael Mackenzie, Saskia Scholtes and Aline van Duyn (Financial Times): Trepidation as Fed prepares to end easing, October 29, 2009. As the Federal Reserve’s programme of buying mortgage debt edges towards $1,000 billion this week, investors are starting to worry about what happens once the central bank starts to slow down and exit from this key plank of its monetary easing policy.

• Quint Tatro (Minyanvile): Seven lessons from a legend, October 29, 2009. Jesse Livermore was wealthy and broke several times over during his tumultuous life, which ended in his suicide. His ability to make and lose millions garnered him many lessons which the trading community have enshrined over the decades since his death. Yet these lessons and

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Hatzius on US growth, rates and economists

Prieur du Plessis (September 14th, 2009) Writes:

This post features a three-part video interview with Jan Hatzius, chief US economist for Goldman Sachs, by Aline van Duyn, FT’s US Markets Editor. Whether you like Goldman or not, Hatzius is worthwhile viewing material.

Part 1: Hatzius on US growth Hatzius expects “the second half of 2009 … to be quite strong” but “in 2010 we’ll probably see some renewed deceleration in growth”. He sees temporary measures including the inventory cycle and the fiscal stimulus as being responsible for “growth in the second half of 2009, but … by late 2010 that number is going to be somewhere around zero”.

Click here or on the image below to view Part 1 of the video clip.

jan-hatzius-14-september-2009

Part 2: Hatzius on US rates Hatzius sees “no rate hikes … through the end of

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Video-o-rama: Goldman Sachs ad nauseam

Prieur du Plessis (July 18th, 2009) Writes:

I am experiencing Internet problems and have difficulty accessing my data sources. This week’s video compilation is therefore posted without the usual introductory paragraphs. But I’m sure the interesting clips will speak for themselves.

Wall St Cheat Sheet: AIG - writing stories about people who play “it” safe “Evidently, AIG is a company that plays ‘it’ safe (whatever the hell that means) and knows how to manage risk better than anyone else in the known universe. Don’t believe me? Take their word for it. We let corporations falsely advertise all the time, and here is a perfect example of the cost.”

videorama-pic1

Source: Damien Hoffman, Wall St Cheat Sheet, July 15, 2009.

Bloomberg: Shiller, Roubini discuss “anemic” economic recovery “Nouriel Roubini, professor at New York University’s Stern School of Business, and Robert Shiller, chief economist and co-founder

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Aig, Aline van Duyn, author, Bank, Bank Of America, Barry Ritholtz, bloomberg, Bonds, Can Wall Street, ceo, chief economist and co-founder, China, Chris Kofinis, Cnn, Commodities, Congress, Credit Suisse, Damien Hoffman, David Wessel;, Democratic strategist, Dennis Berman;, economics professor, Evan Newmark;, Federal Reserve System, finance, Financial Times, Fusion IQ, Fusion IQ CEO, Gary Shilling, Giles Keating;, Goldman Sachs, Hank Paulson, head, Head of Global Economics, Influential bank analyst, Intelligent Investor columnist, Internet problems, investment postcards, Jason Zweig;, Jeffery Harte, Jeremy Siegel, John Authers, Jpmorgan, Ken Prewitt, MacroMarkets;, Market Commentary, Max Keiser;, Meredith Whitney, Meredith Whitney Advisory Group;, Merrill, new york university, nouriel roubini, Professor, Republican strategist, Robert Shiller, S&P, Stern School of Business;, Terry Holt, The Macro Trader, The Wall Street Journal, Tom Keene, United States, Wall Street Journal, Wharton finance professor, Yahoo, yale, youtube

Video Interview: Roubini preaches more gloom

Prieur du Plessis (December 23rd, 2008) Writes:

Nouriel Roubini, professor at Stern School of Business at New York University and chairman of RGE Monitor, is renowned for having foreseen the current economic malaise a number of years ago. He was scorned at the time by mainstream economists for being a crank, but the same people are now lauding him for his foresight and paying top price for the consulting services of Roubini Global Economics.

Aline van Duyn, US Markets Editor of the Financial Times, has just conducted a three-part video interview with Roubini on topics ranging from the likely duration of the recession to regulation, the demise of more hedge funds and the outlook for stocks, commodities, currencies and bonds.

In Part 1 of the interview, Roubini expects 2009 to be a

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Video-o-rama: The unfolding financial crisis

Prieur du Plessis (November 13th, 2008) Writes:

A batch of interesting video clips about the election of Barack Obama and the unfolding financial crisis has appeared over the past few days as all and sundry are attempting to make sense of a rather murky picture. A number of clips that have attracted my attention are shared below.

Firstly, back to basics with a rudimentary explanation by Enspire of how the mortgage crisis came about. (Click here in case you missed Enspire’s previous video, “Understanding the financial crisis”.)

Enspire Learning: The mortgage banking meltdown

13-nov-1.jpg

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Ajay Rajadhyaksha;, Al Hunt;, Aline van Duyn, America, Americas, bank balance sheets, Bank of America Securities LLC;, bank on-balance-sheet lending;, Banking, Barack Obama, Barclays Capital, Bill Ackman, bloomberg, Brown Brothers Harriman, Cambridge, Centre for Policy Research;, Charlie Rose, China, Clayton, Dallas, Discussing government;, Don Gogel;, Dubilier & Rice;, Fannie Mae, Fed Bank of Dallas, Federal Reserve Bank, Federal Reserve System, finance, Financial Times, Freddie Mac, George W Bush, harvard, Harvard University, India, International Monetary Fund, James Galbraith, James Lamont;, Jeffrey Frankel, Joel Naroff, Marc Chandler;, Market Commentary, Massachusetts, Meredith Whitney, Michael Pond;, Mickey Levy;, mortgage banking meltdown;, Naroff Economic, New Delhi, Olivier Blanchard;, Oppenheimer, Pershing Square Capital;, Pratap Bhanu Metha;, Richard Fisher, Richard Milne;, Robert Parry;, Simon Kennedy, SociéTé GéNéRale, St. Louis, Stephen Gallagher;, Texas, Troubled Asset Relief Program;, United States, University of Texas, US administration, Us Government, USD, wall street, Washington, William Poole, World Economic Forum, youtube

The Dominoes keep Falling

Alex Stanczyk (September 11th, 2008) Writes:

Fannie and Freddie Bailout

Fannie and Freddie were thrown a government lifeline over the weekend but several regional banks with sizeable equity stakes in the two firms won’t be so lucky. ..

10 regional banks with exposure to Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae preferred stock*

- Gateway Financial ( nasdaq: GBTS ) (34%) - Midwest Banc ( nyse: MBHI ) (32%) - Westamerica Bancorporation ( nasdaq: WABC ) (16%) - Farmers Capital (14%) - Sovereign Bancorp ( nyse: SOV ) (13%) - Flushing Financial ( nasdaq: FFIC ) (12%) - Valley National Bancorp ( nyse: VLY ) (10%) - Pulaski Financial ( nasdaq: PULB ) (10%) - Columbia Banking ( nyse: COLB ) (8%) - Astoria Financial ( nyse: AF ) (7%)

*Percentage represents holdings of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac as a percentage of total tangible capital.

Henneke of Tyche Capital had this to say to CNBC:

The end result

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