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How Equity And Currency Markets Behave After Financial Crisis

John Lee (June 2nd, 2009) Writes:

Debt-based monetary systems are inherently unstable. Money is created out of thin air by the banks and lent to government, consumers and businesses. In order to service and replay those debts, the borrowers take on more debts. Asset prices are inflated, and the vicious cycle continues until the debtors are unable to borrow or the banks are unwilling to lend. At that point the system snaps, everything is sold off, and we have a financial crisis at hand. In this paper we examine what happens to equity and currency markets in the aftermath of financial crisis.

1998 Russia

Declining productivity, an artificially high fixed exchange rate between the ruble and foreign currencies to avoid public turmoil, and a chronic fiscal deficit were the background to Russia ’s financial meltdown in 1998. The economic cost of the first war in Chechnya that …

7 Trillion Reasons to Own Gold

Sean Brodrick (October 9th, 2008) Writes:
just a few short weeks, America has gone from looking at a potential economic downturn to staring into an economic abyss. In a matter of days, confidence in the Federal Reserve’s ability to unfreeze our nation’s credit markets has nearly vanished. And now, to add insult to injury, the Fed has decided to start financing business corporations directly. No wonder investors are looking for an escape from this madness! And no wonder gold is performing far better than virtually any other commodity! Here’s how this crisis has unfolded and where it could be headed … Wall Street’s Vote of No Confidence The market has shown how ineffective it thought the $700 billion bailout would be on Friday when stocks cratered … again on Monday … and still ...

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