Enter your Email Address


Useful Links

Know What The Insiders Are Doing!
Stock Trading Software

More Links




[Most Recent Quotes from www.kitco.com]

[Most Recent Quotes from www.kitco.com]




Prieur’s readings (October 25, 2009)

Prieur du Plessis (October 25th, 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.

• Jason Clenfield and Norihiko Kosaka (Bloomberg): US risks Japan-like “lost decade” on stimulus exit, Koo says, October 23, 2009. US officials contemplating an exit from record fiscal stimulus are in danger of repeating mistakes that plunged Japan into its lost decade of stagnant growth, according to Richard Koo of Nomura Research Institute. “This isn’t a cold, its more like pneumonia,” said Koo, author of “Balance Sheet Recession,” a 2003 book about the malaise that hit Japan after its stock and real-estate markets crashed in 1990. “We still need more government spending,” he said, adding it could take “three to five years to get out of this mess, even under the best of circumstances.”

• Brad DeLong (Caijing.com.cn): A moment too soon after the

...

Words from the (investment) wise for the week that was (June 22 – 28, 2009)

Prieur du Plessis (June 28th, 2009) Writes:

“Words from the Wise” this week comes to you in a shortened format as I do not have access to my normal research resources while on the road in Europe (also see my post “Gone A.W.O.L. - to Slovenia and Switzerland“). Although very little commentary is provided, a full dose of excerpts from interesting news items and quotes from market commentators is included.

While investors’ hopes of an economic recovery might have got ahead of reality, the cartoonists continually reminded us of worrisome issues …

28-06-09-01

Source: Signe Wilkinson, Washington Post,  June 18, 2009.

The past week’s performance of the major asset classes is summarized by the chart below - a mixed bag so to speak.

28-06-09-02

Source: StockCharts.com

A summary of

...
Tags for this Post:
A.W.O.L., adviser, Africa, Alliance & Leicester, America, Amtrak, Aram Shishmanian;, Argentina, Asha Bangalore, Asia, Azusa Kato, bad bank, Banc of America Securities, Bangladesh, Bank, bank moves, Bank Of America, bank of america corp, Bank of America Merrill Lynch;, bank restructuring;, Barack Obama, Barney Frank, Barry Ritholtz, Beijing, Bell Curve Trading;, ben bernanke, Bill Fleckenstein, bill king, billionaire hedge fund manager, bloomberg, Bloomberg Television, Bnp Paribas, Bonds, Bradford, Brazil, Business Roundtable;, Businessweek, Businesswire, Canada, Canon AT-1 Film Camera;, Capgemini, central Asia, Central Bank Gold, Central Banks, ceo, Chairman, chairman and CEO, charles kirk, chief economist, China, Christopher Dodd, Christopher Wood;, Chrysler, Commodities, Confidence, Congress, Connecticut, consultant, contraction in the face, Craig Torres;, Cyprus, Dan Weil;, David Fuller (Fullermoney);, David Hauner;, David Oakley, Denis Staunton, Deutsche Bank, donald coxe, Dow 30, Dow Jones Transportation, E, Eastern Europe, Economist, Egypt, Elijah Cummings;, emergency finance, emerginvest, energy, Energy Sector, equity strategist, EUR, Europe, European Central Bank, even real estate;, Federal Open Market Committee, Federal Reserve Bank, Federal Reserve System, Fedex, finance ministry, Financial Times, Financier, Fitch Ratings, France, fund manager, gas and oil, George Soros, Germany, Ghana, Gross Domestic Product, Growing government, Guatemala, Gwen Robinson, HBOS, head, head of emerging EMEA economics, House Oversight Committee, household real estate;, Ignis Asset Management, India, Indonesia, International Bank for Reconstruction and Development, International Monetary Fund, investment postcards, Ireland, Irish Times, Islamic Republic of Iran, Italy, Ivan Seidenberg, Japan, Jason Clenfield, Jason Todd;, Jim Rogers, John Authers, John Nyaradi;, Julie Crawshaw, Kenya, king, Krishna Guha, Lebanon, Lehman Brothers, Ljubljana, Main Street, major US indices, manager, Marc Faber, Market Commentary, Maryland, Massachusetts, Mauritius, Merrill Lynch & Co., Michael Mandel, Middle East, Miles Costello, Minyanville.com, MIT, Money Printing, Morgan Stanley, MSCI Taiwan, Nasdaq Composite, National Asset Management Agency, National Association Of Realtors, Natural Gas, natural gas-oil spread, New York, new york university, Nigeria, Norma Cohen, Northampton, Northern Rock, Northern Trust, nouriel roubini, Oecd, Oil, oil price gain, Oil Prices, Olivier Blanchard;, Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development, Pakistan, Paul Desmond, Paul Samuelson;, Penn Central;, president, prime candidate, quarterly CEO Economic Outlook Index, Ralph Atkins, Real Estate, Real Estate Prices, Reuters, richard russell, Ron Griess;, Russell 2000, Russia, Santander, Scott Lanman;, senate banking committee, Signe Wilkinson, Simon Carswell, Slovenia, South Africa, Sp 500, Sri Lanka, Stephen Labaton, Stuart Thomson, Swiss National Bank, Switzerland, Taiwan, taken oil, The Atlantic magazine, The Chart Store, The King, the New York Times, Thomas Jefferson, Timothy Homan, Todd Harrison, Tokyo, toxic bank assets;, Turkey, Twitter, Ukraine, unemployment insurance, United Arab Emirates, United Kingdom, United States, US administration, Us Federal Reserve, Us Government, USD, Venezuela, Verizon Communications, wachovia, Wall Street Journal, Washington, Washington Post, weakened banking system, web links, Western Europe, White House, world gold council, Yahoo

Too Big to Suffer a Loss – Doug Noland

John Lee (September 15th, 2008) Writes:
For the week, the Dow gained 1.8% (down 13.9% y-t-d) and the S&P500 increased 0.8% (down 14.8%). The Utilities rose 2.6% (down 14.8%), and the Morgan Stanley Consumer index gained 2.2% (down 5.1%). The Transports jumped 3.8% (up 11%), and the Morgan Stanley Cyclical index advanced 3.3% (down 13.2%). The small cap Russell 2000 added 0.2% (down 5.1%), and the S&P400 Mid-Caps increased 0.4% (down 8.1%). The NASDAQ100 was about unchanged (down 15.2%), while the Morgan Stanley High Tech index slipped 0.4% (down 15.6%). The Semiconductors lost 2.9% (down 21.2%). The Street.com Internet Index declined 0.3% (down 11%), while the NASDAQ Telecommunications index gained 1.7% (down 10.2%). The Biotechs gained 1.0% (up 3%). The financial stocks were mixed. With Lehman collapsing, the Broker/Dealers sank 11.6% (down 35.9%). Meanwhile, the Banks gained 3.2% (down 19.9%). With Bullion sinking $37, the ...
Tags for this Post:
Abdel Latif Wahba, Abigail Moses, Adam, Aetna, Agrium, Alabama, Alec Phillips, Alex Nicholson, Alex Tanzi, America, Andre Soliani, Andrea Coombes, Asset Backed Securities, Associated Press, Aud, bank credit, Bank Failures, Barack Obama, Barclays Capital, Bear Stearns, Biotechs, bloomberg, Bob Ivry, Bovespa equities, Brazil, Brian Swint, Bush, bush administration, CAD, Camulos Capital LP, Caracas, Cbo, central bank, China, China’s government, Christian Wienberg, Christopher Flanagan, Citigroup, Comptroller of the Currency, Congress, Congressional Budget Office, CP/Money Funds, CRB, currency, Customs Bureau, Dallas Federal, Dallas Federal Reserve, Dan Levy, David Enrich, David Reilly, Dawn Kopecki, DAX equities, Dean Nessen, Deborah Solomon, December Corn, Demand & Checkable Deposits, Denmark, Depression, DKK, Dmitry Medvedev, Donna Kardos, Doug Noland, Dow 30, Dow Jones, Dubai, Dubai government, Edward McKelvey, energy, EUR, eurodollars, Europe, Exports, Fannie Mae, Farhan Sharif, Fed Foreign Holdings, Federal Government, Federal Housing Finance Agency, Federal Reserve System, finance housing, Financial Times, Florida, Food Costs, Freddie Mac, Goldman Sachs, Goldman Sachs Group Inc, goldmau.com, Greg Hitt, Gross Domestic Product, Halliburton, Hedge Fund Research, Henrique Meirelles, Henry Paulson, home-loan banks, Hurricane, India, insurance-like contracts investors, International Swaps and Derivatives Association, Internet Index, Invest Co, Jacqueline Palank, James Lockhart, James R. Hagerty, James T. Areddy, Janet Ong, Japan, Jason Clenfield, Jeremy Leaf, Jeremy R. Cooke, Jim Croft, Johan Carlstrom, John Brinsley, John Lee, john mccain, John Shaw, Jon Hilsenrath, Joshua Goodman, JPMorgan Chase & Co., Jpy, Kathleen Chu, Kevin Hamlin, KRW, Lehman, Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc, Lester Pimentel, Li Yanping, Loans & Leases, Los Angeles, Los Angeles Community College District, Louise Story, Mahmoud Kassem, main mortgage finance firms, Maria Levitov, Market Commentary, Markus Balser, Matthew Brown, Matthew Walter, MBS, Merrill Lynch & Co., Mexican Bolsa, Mexico, Michael Farmer, Michael Quint, mining, Money Fund, Moody's, Morgan Stanley, Mortgage Asset Research Institute, mortgage finance giants, Moscow, MXP, NASDAQ Telecommunications, National Institute for Economic and Social Research, Neil Unmack, New York, New York Times, New York's State Dormitory Authority, New Zealand, Nick Timiraos, Nikkei 225, Nipa Piboontanasawat, North Texas Tollway Authority, Oester Kontrolbank, Oil, oil exporting economy, Oil Imports, olympics, Output, Pakistan, Patrick Yoest, Peter Orszag, Peter Westin, printing press, RAB Capital PLC, Real Estate, RealtyTrac Inc., Retail Money Funds, Retail Sales, Richard Fisher, Richard Shelby, RK Capital Management LLP, Romy Varghese, Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors, Russell 2000, Russia, Saijel Kishan, Savings Deposits, seasonal and retail businesses, Securities Credit, senate banking committee, September Gasoline, SGD, Shamim Adam, Stacy-Marie Ishmael, Standard Poors, Steve Bryant, Stewart Bailey, T.J. Lim, Taiwan, Tennessee, Texas, The Bank of Mexico, The Wall Street Journal, Tim Adams, Timothy R. Homan, Total Money Market Fund, Tracy Withers, Transports, Turkey, Tyson Foods, Unicredit Group, United Kingdom, United States, Us Government, Us Treasury, USD, Utilities, Venezuela, Vietnam, Vince Breitenbach, Wall Street Journal, Wall Street Journal Asia, Washington, Washington Mutual, William Mauldin, yuan, ZAR

Newsletter

No recommendations, either expressed or implied, are being made to buy, sell, hold or short any of the mentioned stocks. No legal, tax or accounting advice is expressed or implied. Always contact your attorney, CPA, or tax advisor before acting on any legal or tax issues. StraightStocks.com is not responsible for the content, products, or services of any of the advertisers on this site. StraightStocks.com receives compensation from advertisers on this blog. Services and products referred to herein are trademarks, registered trademarks, servicemarks, and/or registered servicemarks of their respective trademark or servicemark owners.