Dan Denning

Dan Denning

Dan Denning’s belief in free markets, sound money, personal liberty and small government have underpinned everything he’s done during 18 years in the financial publishing industry.

In 1999, he began working remotely with Lord William Rees-Mogg to publish his work in America. In 2004-5 he had the privilege of working directly with him in London.

After writing a book, The Bull Hunter, in 2005, he built a publishing business in Melbourne. It’s now Australia’s biggest and most respected independent financial publishing house.

He returned to London in 2015, working with Nick O'Connor and Bill Bonner to make Southbank Investment Research the leading independent financial publication in the UK

  • Prepare for the Financial Volcanic Eruption

    $22 trillion and QE4EVA… The inflation temptation and gold or government bonds?… Flow towers, victory gardens, and boltholes… NEW PLYMOUTH, TARANAKI – The Fed is going to make this sucker blow. That’s what I found myself thinking this morning, looking…

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  • The Assassination of Bitcoin

    Editor’s Note: The Bonner & Partners offices were closed last Friday for the Thanksgiving holiday weekend. In lieu of our regularly scheduled Diary, we share the below guest essay from Bill’s righthand man, Dan Denning. As Bill reported previously, central…

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  • How Trump Breaks up Big Tech

    Editor’s Note: Last week, President Trump accused Silicon Valley giant Google of censoring conservative-leaning articles in its search results. Google denied the charge. But Dan Denning, Bill’s coauthor on The Bill Bonner Letter, thinks the president might be on to…

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  • Borrowing before the bond bust?

    You shouldn’t ignore genuine opportunities to make money. Did you see that Microsoft sold $17 billion worth of bonds on Monday? The US tech giant is one of just two US corporates with an AAA credit rating (the other is…

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  • The evolution of our robot overlords

    Surprise! Your usual host, the lovely Nick O’Connor, is out today. Well, he’s preparing for a sit-down interview with Eoin Treacy (from Trigger Point Trader and Frontier Tech Investor). Eoin’s flown over from Trump-ravaged America and has a hot new…

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  • The most unkindest cut of all

    Oh what a tangled web the markets are weaving for us today, dear reader! All the post-Trump trends in the market – strong dollar, strong oil, falling bonds – are under threat. But the biggest threat to stocks could come…

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  • Europe’s banks are heading for catastrophe

    We interrupt your normal edition of Capital & Conflict for a chance to take a broadside at conventional wisdom. The opportunity presents itself courtesy of the mouthpiece of “received wisdom” in the British financial media. It’s a target rich environment…

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  • American coup

    There are two looming sources of political instability that could lead to market volatility in the next month. The first is clearly the US elections. The second is what happens after the US elections. If I’m right, the aftermath of…

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  • The great wall of worry

    Well it looks like I picked the wrong day to trash hydrocarbons. Yesterday I quoted FactSet data suggesting that earnings in the S&P 500 energy sector could fall by 66% in the third quarter. They still could, mind you. But…

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  • Trouble in Deutschland

    No time to waste today (or any day). Let me begin with the question I left off with yesterday: are corporate earnings rising, and rising fast enough to justify higher stock prices from these levels? It’s a simple question. The…

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  • How to kill an economy

    Repeat after me: There is no recovery in corporate earnings. There is only an explosion in debt, driven by central bank policies that have produced no growth and wasted time. Time is the most precious resource of all. Its misallocation…

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  • Swan song of the bull

    Today we pen an ode to easy money and bull markets without regret (or critical thinking). Maybe it’s not worth it to fight the Fed, or to point out how low interest rates have inflated stock and bond prices. Maybe…

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  • Did a civil war just begin in the US?

    There’s no way around it so let’s get straight into it. In today’s letter, we have to deal with what the US Federal Reserve did and said yesterday. Let’s begin with the end in mind and conclude the following: the…

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  • Growth dividend trumps dead Fed

    Promise me something today. Okay, you don’t have to promise. But do your best. Remember this: a better, wealthier, happier future with less human suffering is built by human beings trading in free markets, not governments or chairpersons of the…

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  • A bank big enough to take everyone down

    First, a correction from last week on the total per capita cost of Brexit, according to Bloomberg economist Tyler Cowen. You’ll recall that Cowen said you could expect a 10% decline in British exports because of a weaker (long-term) pound…

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  • Patient zero in the banking zombie apocalypse

    Everyone who’s anyone (in the office) is talking about Chinese debt levels. It was all the rage, thanks to the most recent quarterly report from the Bank for International Settlements (BIS). And what a page turner it was! I jest….

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  • The orchestrated cash emergency

    A question to begin today’s letter: how do you turn an unpopular academic concept into an everyday legal reality for millions of people? Think of this question in the spirt Jack Ryan tackled a similar problem in The Hunt for…

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  • The reward for your thrift

    Well it’s beginning to get embarrassing for the Brexit doom-mongers. The UK’s unemployment rate hit an 11-year low of 4.9% in July, according to the Office for National Statistics (ONS). There are 31.77 million Britons in the workforce. The workforce…

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  • Will the Bank of England do any more stimulating?

    All hat and no cattle. That’s what Janet Yellen and her crew at the Fed are now. They’re all talk. No action. The evidence is in Monday’s rally in US stocks after Fed member Lael Brainard gave comments that only…

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  • Bond market blood bath

    If we’ve learned anything in the last four days, it’s that the biggest beneficiaries to “loose” monetary policies are stocks and bonds. And now they’re the biggest losers. They’re falling because central banks around the world have had a look…

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  • The best investor in the world loves cash

    How hated is cash? Maybe you thought it was just the academics and the financial authoritarians that are trying to get rid of it. No. It’s investors too. There are some investors who hate cash so much they’re willing to…

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  • In cash we trust

    Oh dear. It’s the proverbial Catch-22 for Mark Carney, Mario Draghi, Haruhiko Kuroda and Janet Yellen. Declare victory in the war on deflation and end QE too soon, and you get yourself a bond market crash. Keep fighting the bad…

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  • Japan’s phased withdrawal from QE (a taper and its tantrum)

    The summer ceasefire in the markets is over. The war – against deflation, against savers and against cash – is hotting up again. But which monetary generals are fighting the last war? And which front line is about to collapse,…

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  • Westminster’s dangerous game

    Those G20 leaders in China better enjoy the champagne and caviar while they can. The next G20 meeting of world leaders isn’t until July of next year, in Hamburg. The world may be a very different place by then. You…

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  • Tend your garden and mind your own business

    Well if this is the Brexit disaster the establishment predicted, bring on the sequel! Not to be too flippant, but the news just keeps getting worse if you expected Brexit to trigger an immediate catastrophe in Britain. That doesn’t mean…

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  • The less-cash society

    You go away for one single week to the Scottish Highlands to get away from it all and what happens? A Harvard economist comes out guns blazing against cash and the drug dealing perverts who use it. Then the stockmarket…

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  • The disruptive disaster facing China

    Today’s letter is going to finish where Thursday’s left off: in the future. I’m going to show you how everything has come full circle. Manufacturing will come back to America and Europe. Robots will replace humans. And then the robots…

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  • The revolution comes full circle

    It began in Pittsburgh. And it wasn’t Google, Tesla, or Ford that did it. It was Uber. I’m talking about using your phone to summon a self-driving car. It’s always where this was headed. Electric car drones replacing black cabs…

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  • The revolution comes full circle

    The Industrial Revolution is complete. Dan Denning explains why we’re now on the cusp of a new, greater revolution – one driven by technology.

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  • Post-Brexit Britain strong, dollar weaker?

    Today’s Capital & Conflict is dedicated to all those moon-dogging, doom-mongering economists and experts who said the British economy would fall off a cliff and crash in a fiery heap if the people voted to leave the European Union. This…

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  • QE to hit dividends via pensions

    In today’s letter I want to show you how a QE-spawned deficit in defined benefit pensions could become a problem for all shareholders and savers – even if you don’t work for a FTSE 100 company with a defined benefit…

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  • Battle of the British stocks

    Dan Denning looks at two big British companies, and explains how just one number can tell you which is the better investment for your portfolio.

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  • Should you sell your stocks?

    This just in: UK consumer price inflation in July was 0.6% according to figures out this morning from the Office for National Statistics (ONS). Expectations were for 0.5%, according to Bloomberg. That prompted some breathless commentary on Twitter that a…

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  • FTSE in “critical technical zone”

    Things are getting complicated for UK stocks, says Dan Denning. And if you thought your retirement prospects were bad, spare a thought for the millennials.

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  • The age of the unthinkable

    Two quick items to kick off with today. First, gold had its best first half of the year since 1980, according to the World Gold Council. It was up 25% in US dollar terms. The WGC says investment demand from…

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  • The psychology of price signals

    The definition of irony is when what you really mean is the opposite of what you say. So what do you call it when the effect caused by your actions is the opposite of what you intended. It’s not irony….

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  • Bond hoarders of Britain, unite!

    The Bank of England’s bond-buying programme has hit a snag: nobody’s selling. Dan Denning looks at what’s going on.

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  • Another BoE rate cut?

    It’s been another light 24 hours for news from capital markets. There has been some news on the paltry (and vanishing) rate British savers can earn with banks. More on those vanishing rates and the possibility of another Bank of…

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  • Can the FTSE 100 break 7,000 again?

    The muffled tongue of Big Ben tolled nine by the clock as the cortege left the palace, but on history’s clock it was sunset, and the sun of the old world was setting in a dying blaze of splendour never…

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  • Carney goes full hard-man

    There’s nothing much I can say that hasn’t already been said about the Bank of England’s decision to cut the bank rate to a 322-year low of 0.25%. The ÂŁ70 billion stimulus package and the other measures won’t – in…

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  • Oil isn’t dead yet

    At last. Finally. Some good news about the future! The UK will have more charging stations for electric vehicles than petrol stations by 2020, according to Nissan. Yes, the company is probably talking its own book. But it’s probably right….

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  • On the shortness of life

    “You must be miserable,” a friend said to me earlier in the week. “Why would you say that?” I cheerfully asked. “Well, all you ever write about is bad things that could happen. Negative interest rates. The abolition of cash….

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  • Interest rate thingamajig and negative deposit rates

    Here’s an honest question: do you think anyone at the Bank of England actually knows how to move interest rates? I’m talking about a cut in the bank rate from .50 basis points – or even a rise! According to…

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  • Japanese government may have burst its own bond bubble

    If you prefer your Capital & Conflict as a video, you can watch a seven minute version of today’s letter here on YouTube or here on Facebook. I recorded a video today because it felt like one of those quietly…

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  • The “Cash Krieg” begins

    The next crisis will be caused by government and central bank efforts to prevent it. The result will be the destruction of money as we know it, says Dan Denning.

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  • The curse of cash

    More alarming news on two fronts today. First, there is movement on the Japanese front. Bonds have sold off and something big may be in the offing. Then, an intellectual defence for the “phasing out” of cash has been published…

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  • Japan brings us closer to the “endgame” and the grab for your cash

    In the last 24 hours we have come one giant leap closer to the monetary endgame. That endgame, as I’ve tried to convince you this week, includes an assault on your money, your retirement, and your savings. What happened in…

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  • Forever debt, forever war

    China’s Defence Ministry has announced joint naval exercises in September with the Russian Navy. I’ve been banging on about the money wars all week. But let’s not forget that armed conflict is the more traditional type of conflict. And in…

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  • The “Cash Krieg” begins – the war against deflation

    You will have a hard time believing me today. If you thought I was exaggerating that there’s a war coming – a war on your cash and a war on your savings – then now I offer you proof. It’s been…

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  • Negative interest rates are on their way to Britain

    Welcome to part two in our history/forecast of the money wars. If you missed day one, you can read it here. The task is simple: what can you do about the great crack-up in the world’s money system? How do you,…

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  • The first casualty of war

    RBS: 13th worst in the “adverse scenario” stress test Among the calamities of war may be justly numbered the diminution of the love of truth, by the falsehoods which interest dictates, and credulity encourages. Samuel Johnson, The Idler #30, November…

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  • ECB and BoJ take centre stage

    What the world needs now, is debt, sweet debt. Isn’t that how Dionne Warwick’s hit song, written by Burt Bacharach went? Ah, no! It was this: What the world needs now is love, sweet love / It’s the only thing…

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  • The demonetisation of cash

    Good news on the Brexit front. Britain’s economy hasn’t imploded. UK unemployment from March to May was actually down 54,000 compared to the previous quarter, according to data released this morning by the Office for National Statistics (ONS). A record…

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  • Deep state price manipulation

    Let’s leave the decline and fall of Western civilisation to the side for today. It will happen whether I have anything to say about it or not. Instead, I want you to focus on the iron ore price and inflation….

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  • Markets ignore potential break-up of EU

    We begin the week with a failed (and perhaps staged) coup attempt in Turkey. A top Air Force general is in jail, 6,000 other judges and military personnel have been arrested and over 300 people are dead after the events…

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  • The Revolutionary Crisis

    I’ll deal with markets first, before getting into history and politics. I want to take you back to the point Jim Rickards made yesterday about the European Union being stronger without the UK. But I want to look at it in…

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  • Safety slaughters income

    The global trend of preferring “safety” over “income” continues – this time in Germany. The Germans auctioned €5 billion worth of 10-year bonds with a zero coupon. That means you get no income while you own the bond. You just…

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  • S&P and bond signals

    The S&P 500 made a new high in New York. It’s been 13 long months since the index made a new high. But it did so yesterday at 2,137. This seven year bull market may not be in rip-roaring health. But it’s…

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  • Britain after Brexit: let the bull market begin

    Maybe Britain should have a national identity crisis more often. The FTSE 100 became the first big European index to enter into bull market territory when it closed at 6,682. It’s up 7% year-to-date but more than 20% from the…

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  • Italy at war with the European Central Bank

    As if the EU didn’t have enough to worry about with Brexit, the European Central Bank (ECB) finds itself in a political dogfight with the Italian government. At issue is whether Italy can skirt ECB rules on bail-ins in order…

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  • Borrowing in the property market

    The Bank of England is widely expected to cut its bank rate from its current level at 0.5%. The bank rate has been dormant at that level since March 5th, 2009. Earlier this year, hardly anyone would have expected that…

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  • Safety at any price

    How much are you prepared to pay for safety? And is what you’re buying really safe? We’re about to find out the answer to both questions. A total of three British property funds have frozen redemptions. Interest rates on government…

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  • Britain’s crack up bust

    The relief rally in UK stocks is over. Now, cracks are beginning to emerge in the actual banking and financial system. The stresses of Brexit are showing up on balance sheets and in monetary policy. The global debt bubble was…

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  • Carney, the will of the people and the market

    If you fancy a video preview of the week ahead of stocks, bonds, and the pound, I put together one on Sunday afternoon. You can watch it here on YouTube. The short version is that Mark Carney from the Bank…

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  • When is income not income? When it’s called “negative income”

    I keep trying to keep my eyes off the market so I can work on this new project. It’s usually the best thing to do in weeks like this. Stick to your plan. Manage your risk. Don’t panic. Ignore the…

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  • Corbyn was right

    Finally room to breathe. The pound shrugged off the S&P’s belated downgrade of the UK credit rating from AAA to AA and is up off its 31-year lows. Asian markets are in the green this morning. It’s not a massive…

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  • Devil take the hindmost

    Germany up. France up. Italy up. Hungary, Iceland and the Republic of Ireland on fire in the football. Everything’s coming up Europe today! Stockmarkets on the continent have not let last night’s thunderstorms in Britain dampen their spirits. The late…

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  • Banking as we know it will die

    History shows that the issuers of legal tender and banknotes have only one real play left when the public loses confidence in money. Once the public reckons that purchasing power is in rapid decline, they can’t get rid of paper…

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  • The systemic risk of low bond yields

    Markets, of course, are simply mechanisms for measuring people’s emotions. And prior to yesterday afternoon’s murder of Labour MP Jo Cox, markets already looked extreme and stretched. Then they snapped. As an example, take the fact that the entire Swiss…

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  • Fed to go negative?

    What are the odds now that the Fed’s next move is a rate cut or negative rates? Think about it. The people who are least happy about the Fed’s decision right now are in Japan. The Japanese yen is up…

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  • A Brexit crisis?

    Calm down. Deep breaths. Let’s not get sucked into jawboning about politics. Remember, prices are signals. Markets are mechanisms for communicating prices. What do prices tell us about the odds of a Brexit this time next week? I’ll come back…

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  • Fear in the air, cash in the vaults

    How scary is it getting out there? Fund managers increased their position in cash to the largest percentage since 2001, according to research published this week from Bank of America. There’s a lot of fear in the air. The subject…

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  • This is not your Britain

    Let’s take a step back from the abyss. Whether the financial world ends in fire or ice, it still ends. Let’s admire the view from the edge of the abyss. Better yet, let’s ponder the latest note from Goldman Sachs…

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  • Lowest yields ever – and going lower

    The problem British savers now confront is unprecedented. Yields on ten-year gilts have never been this low. Ever. In all the history of British bonds. The ten-year gilt yield fell to 1.263% during trading yesterday, according to Tradeweb. Also on…

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  • A minus bond bull is born

    And what rough beast, its hour come round at last, Slouches towards Bethlehem to be born? William Butler Yeats, The Second Coming That is the sound of alarm bells ringing inside my face. The warning signs come from the bond…

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  • Socialist silence on Venezuela

    Soaring prices. Food and water shortages. Long lines. Police in riot gear. The breakdown of normal economic life and the complete loss of trust in politics. Welcome to Venezuela. Have you heard much about the country’s woes? My guess is:…

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  • San Andreas Bond Fault

    There are now more than $10 trillion worth of negative yielding government bonds in the world. More astounding still, there are over $380 billion worth of negative yielding corporate bonds! Imagine that. Paying to lend your money to a for-profit…

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  • What’s best for Britain is not what you think

    Tell me truly: is it possible that Brexit is bad for the City but good for Britain? No one’s really asked this question yet, at least not directly. As someone who’s in the financial services industry, at least nominally, it’s…

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  • Buy on the sound of Brexit?

    Labour’s deputy leader Tom Watson wants Prime Minister David Cameron to ban hedge funds from running exit polls on 23 June. It’s not because he’s worried they’ll influence the vote. That’s happened in the US before, where exit polls in…

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  • Savers under siege

    Another day. Another step closer to madness. I’m not talking about myself. Or yourself. I’m talking about the modern experiment with money and the attack on your savings. You know, the one distorting markets, changing incentives, and generally making the…

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  • Greek law requires the use of traceable money

    A strange story from Greece. You’ll be required to use credit or debit cards for transactions larger than €500 in order to qualify for certain tax exemptions, according to a new Greek law scheduled to take effect on 1 July. I…

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  • UK Plc’s net liability grows

    Last week I showed you that if you took all the UK government liabilities – central and local government, plus pensions and the banks – that the figure was bigger than just the official debt-to-GDP number. Well the government published its…

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  • Your pension under nuclear attack

    It’s not quite going nuclear. But chancellor George Osborne has played the “pensions” card in the Brexit debate. He’s said that younger individuals would be “between ÂŁ223 and ÂŁ335 a year worse off in retirement.” That’s if you’ve got ÂŁ20,000…

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  • Silver’s golden momentum

    It’s been a week for feeding the brain here at Friars Bridge Court. Most of the editors have interest rates on the mind. Charlie Morris, Fleet Street Letter’s Investment Director, reckons US rates are headed up on labour market strength…

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  • Middle class debt and depression

    What happens to a middle class that’s squeezed by stagnant wage growth, high house prices and a growing tax burden (not to mention pressure on wages from immigration labour)? It has the potential to become politically radicalised. Ask Austria. This…

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  • A signal of things to come

    A reader asked an important question this week about the long-term “death cross” formation on the S&P 500. So what? The death cross is on the S&P 500. That’s America. This is Britain. What about the FTSE 100? Fair point….

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  • Tide going out on globalisation

    What happens when trade barriers and walls go up? What happens when people decide that the free movement of capital, labour, goods and services is no longer improving the world? The social mood changes. And when the social mood changes,…

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  • Death crossroads for globalisation

    It will cost you and your family ÂŁ220 to leave the European Union, according to figures released today by HM Treasury. The expected cost increase is based on a projected 12% decline in sterling over two years (after Brexit), and…

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  • When banks are no longer safe

    This article is probably going to polarise opinion. You’re going to either accuse me of being a “debt fetishist” and “doom monger”. Or you’re going to agree that since 2008, the world’s financial system has become even more burdened by debt…

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  • Boris goes full Nazi

    In college we called it “the Hitler rule”. Any spirited debate was immediately over once one party compared the other to Hitler. When you’ve reached that point in an argument, no persuasion is going to happen. Just a lot of…

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  • A signal from the gold market

    Now it’s getting interesting. And no, I’m not talking about the Brexit debate. I’ll get to that in a second. I’m talking about what gold is whispering in your ear. Gold ETF holdings rose by 63.2 tonnes in the last…

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  • Carney finally earning a pay cheque

    Mark Carney hasn’t done a lick of work since becoming governor of the Bank of England (BoE) in 2013. He’s got an eight year term. He says he’ll step down after five. But the bank rate set by the BoE’s…

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  • The bubble that negative rates blew

    There are $9 trillion worth of government bonds with negative yields on this planet of ours. In Japan, all debt with a maturity of 15 years or less currently has a negative yield. Investors chasing a measly yield of 0.39%…

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  • Brexit “will be like Dunkirk again”

    Lower growth and higher inflation. Or liberation from a “mosquito infested swamp and the greatest economy in the world.” You couldn’t get a bigger contrast of possibilities. But that’s how the public debate on Brexit is shaping up. Which side…

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  • Thrift must be punished

    That pause you hear in the war on cash? That’s your enemy reloading with the next volley. Swiss bank UBS has warned its private clients that it may cost them to hold cash with the bank. That is not a…

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  • Dollar dominance

    It’s the US dollar’s world, and we’re all just living in it. That was, I think, the conclusion of a speech given on the global currency market by Claudio Borio at the Bank for International Settlements (BIS). I’ve never met…

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  • Brexit would be “catastrophic”

    The civil war on the Tory party heated up this weekend. The leadership is doubling down on its anti-Brexit rhetoric. Chancellor George Osborne took to the airwaves and said it would “be catastrophic for people’s jobs and their incomes and…

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  • Endgame for CB Ponzi

    “Inflate or die,” the great Richard Russell used to say. He meant that central banks committed to “fighting deflation” and confronted with massive debts in the economy had but one choice: crank up the press. Fund manager Bill Gross agrees…

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  • Insiders losing control

    It’s on. Oh boy is it ever on. You’re finally going to find out how deep resentment against the financial status quo runs. With Ohio governor John Kasich vanquished from the field, Donald Trump is the presumptive Republican nominee for…

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  • A dress rehearsal for the imposition

    It’s not even summer yet and we’re close to the boiling point in politics too. I’m talking about the point at which frustration over a political process dominated by elites and an economic system dominated by plutocrats drives ordinary people…

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  • ECB to kill the €500 note

    Central planning, and the erosion of personal freedom – the European Central Bank’s governing council will meet to decide the fate of the €500 note. Prepare the bonfires. It does not look promising for the violet coloured bank note that the…

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  • Brexit price tag goes up again

    The closer the 23 June referendum gets, the more expensive leaving the European Union gets, at least if figures from the “Remain” camp are to be believed. Former UK Chancellor of the Exchequer Alistair Darling says that the UK economy…

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  • The Value King is dead

    I come to praise Warren Buffett, not to bury him. But keep a shovel handy just in case. The iconic value investor presided over his annual “Woodstock for geeks”, otherwise known as Berkshire Hathaway’s annual meeting. What did we learn?…

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  • Gold hits $1,260: what it means now

    Well well well! What is happening in the gold market? $1,260/ounce was a big price level for gold, according to The Fleet Street Letter Investment Director Charlie Morris. Why? He explained in the interview I did with him last week….

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  • OECD counts Brexit cost

    Another international organisation has warned Britons that leaving the European Union will be costly. This time it’s the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD). You can read its report if you like. It’s called “The Economic Consequences of Brexit:…

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  • The case against the dollar

    The video update I posted on YouTube this morning was all about what didn’t happen yesterday. The Bank of Japan didn’t increase the monetary base. The Bank of Japan didn’t expand the scope of its asset purchase program. The Bank…

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  • The uncertain future of oil

    Is the oil business in terminal decline? Definitely not. The modern world would grind to a halt and we would all starve without crude oil and refined fuels. Our transportation system (upon which our food and our just-in-time system of…

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  • Was Shanghai a stealth Plaza Accord?

    Jim Rickards was good value at the London debut of his book, The New Case for Gold. Since I arrived a bit ahead of the crowd, I was able to get Jim to explain his theory that the February G20…

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  • Apple buckles, credit troubles

    The world’s technology bellwether – the global proxy for growth – reported a 23% fall in profits and a 13% fall in first quarter revenues. Selling fewer phones, making lower profits… none of that is good. Not for Apple. Not…

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  • “Horror” precedes FML with negative rates

    What’s this about the Bank of Japan (BoJ) offering negative rates on loans to commercial lenders? Rumours are swirling that the BoJ will do exactly that when it meets later this week to announce the latest in its war on…

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  • Oil price crash leads to MENA fiscal crisis

    Nothing quashes a good oil price rally like the chance of “black swan” in China. FTSE 100 stocks copped a belting in early trading after RBS said China’s recent surge of lending to non-financial firms could end with an “abrupt…

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  • Your friend President Obama has some advice

    I’ve been asked by several readers whether I think the Brexit campaign will succeed. My answer is that the people who will vote to leave are more passionate and committed than the people who want to stay. But as far as I can…

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  • Brexit inconsistencies

    Reader mail continues to pour in on George Osborne’s forecast that Brexit would cost each UK household ÂŁ4,300 by 2030. One obvious criticism: how can you claim, on the one hand, that we shouldn’t leave because a post-EU future poses…

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  • Bank revenues take hit, cash as “coined liberty”

    Low and negative interest rates are at least partly to blame for an awful first quarter for the six largest US banks. Those banks – JPMorgan Chase, Bank of America, Goldman Sachs, Wells Fargo, Citigroup and Morgan Stanley – saw…

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  • Riyadh vs Tehran – rapidly declining costs in the solar sector

    The fallout from the weekend’s failed Doha oil deal continues. You have to keep in mind that Saudi Arabia and Iran are basically engaged in proxy wars in Syria and Yemen. Yet they’re both trying to “collaborate” on oil prices…

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  • Germany tries to save the euro

    The European Central Bank (ECB) meets next month to discuss, in part, whether to get rid of the €500 note. There may be no saving the note, even though a raft of articles have popped up showing how Germans, in…

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  • Saudis threaten oil price war

    “If all major producers don’t freeze production, we will not freeze production,” said Saudi Prince Mohammed bin Salman. He’s the man driving the Saudi oil express. And he’s driving a hard bargain with Iran. “If we don’t freeze, then we…

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  • Saudis falling out with Uncle Sam

    The Saudis, and the historical partnerships that have defined the era of the petrodollar, is it all coming apart for the US-Saudi oil/security/dollar/debt relationship? The New York Post reports that Saudi officials have warned US lawmakers that the kingdom will…

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  • Oil cartel in tatters

    Well that escalated quickly! Nothing in the news indicated that the world’s major oil producers would fail to make a deal over the weekend. But the talks in Doha failed to produce the promised production cuts. The world remains awash…

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  • China borrows to spend

    Is China back in the driver’s seat? In the dark days of 2009, it was China’s epic stimulus that kick-started global markets again. Under marching orders from Beijing, state-owned enterprises went on a commodity buying binge. Order was restored, at…

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  • “Severe damage” from Brexit says IMF, Soros warns

    The International Monetary Fund (IMF) has weighed in on the Brexit issue. IMF says Brexit could do “severe regional and global damage.” It added that the disruption of existing trade relationships between Britain and the Continent would pose “major challenges.”…

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  • Facebook backer says everything overvalued

    Peter Thiel, one of the early backers of Facebook, is concerned about “the frothiness of the markets.” At a conference about the future of the payments system, Thiel responded to an audience question about values. He said: “Startup tech stocks…

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  • Long live the long bond bubble!

    It always comes down to supply and demand in the end. Take the problems created by nearly $7 trillion in government bonds trading with a negative yield. Why would you pay to loan money to a government? And if you…

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  • Write like Shakespeare, get paid $250 million

    In the real economy, somebody is always trying to build a better mousetrap. Or some new widget the world doesn’t know it needs yet. Octopus Ventures has stockpiled a ÂŁ400 million war chest to invest in start-up ventures. The UK…

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  • Time bomb bank stocks

    Earnings season has barely begun and it’s already gruesome for banks, especially in Europe. Japanese bank Nomura is calling it quits on Europe. The company is cutting 500 jobs in Europe, the Middle East and Africa. It will stay in…

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  • Austrian bank bail-in: a weapon of wealth destruction

    A weapon of wealth destruction: the bail-in! Bank bail-ins – in which losses on bad debts are shared with senior creditors (including depositors) – have finally come to the Continent. They started in Cyprus. But now it’s happening in Austria….

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  • The disappearance of bank interest

    Previously, I wrote that the war on cash is over. We’ve lost. You are powerless to prevent the assault on using physical cash for everyday transactions. But the battle for your wealth goes on. It’s now a life and death struggle…

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  • What happens next with the gold/silver ratio?

    The gold/silver ratio is back above 80. I mentioned this on the Facebook video this morning. You can see it below. Randy Smallwood, the CEO of Silver Wheaton Corp., says that the last three times the ratio went above 80…

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  • MintChip, “cash weirdos”, and Japanese futons

    Mark Carney’s old pals at the Royal Canadian Mint are running a closed trial of a digital legal tender backed by a government-issued currency (the Canadian dollar). They call it MintChip. It’s intended for use in low-value, online and point-of-sale…

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  • USD in rate limbo

    Is there a ceasefire in the currency wars? The answer to that question matters for a simple reason: a strong US dollar tends to suck money away from emerging markets and “risk” assets. It also tends to benefit tech stocks…

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  • UK trade deficit worse than expected

    Trade deficits aren’t, by themselves, an evil thing. Or economically “bad”. If you’re saving money and have a strong currency, it’s natural that you’d buy cheaper imports. Further, if you have a productive economy that’s growing, you’re going to attract…

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  • Crude inventories fall and more on Au Q2

    Is it time to sell oil and energy shares? FTSE 100 shares got a boost from oil and mining stocks yesterday. But there are 28 days of crude oil supply in inventory, according to data I saw yesterday from Charlie…

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  • Beware gold in Q2

    What’s going on with gold? It was up 17% in the first quarter, in US dollar terms. That was the best first quarter since 1986. And it followed three straight years of falling prices (on an annual basis). Charlie Morris from…

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  • JP Morgan Chase limits cash withdrawals from ATMs

    $1,000 a day. That’s all you’re going to get out of a JP Morgan Chase ATM if you’re not one of the bank’s customers. It’s not the all-out bank run and ban on cash Tim Price started writing about last…

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  • “Minus rates” fail in Japan

    News from Kuroda-san in Japan. Investors clearly don’t believe the governor of the Bank of Japan (Haruhiko Kuroda) can hit the bank’s inflation targets. Japan’s Nikkei 225 fell 2.42% under the 16,000 level. The benchmark index is now down over…

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  • Does the current account deficit matter after all?

    Britain’s economy ran the largest quarterly current account deficit ever in the fourth quarter of last year. Last week, I showed you that the Q4 current account deficit of ÂŁ32.7 billion was 7% of GDP. The ÂŁ92.6 billion annual deficit…

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  • Saudi royals prepare for life after oil

    Big news from Riyadh late last week. The Kingdom of Saudi Arabia is making tangible preparations for life after oil. That doesn’t mean they expect oil to go the way of the dinosaurs. Oil will remain a critical part of…

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  • “Panama Papers” reveal not-so-secret financial underworld

    Let’s get this straight. The rich and the famous… shady politicians and elite athletes… criminals and bankers alike… have all been using off-shore companies to evade taxes and store their wealth beyond the reach of the “authorities” for the last…

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  • UK current account deficit hits record high

    Is Brexit-induced volatility blowing out the UK current account deficit and causing the pound to slide against the US dollar and the euro? That question rears its thorny head this week with two pieces of macroeconomic data. Let’s do the…

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  • Bank of England girds itself for Brexit

    The countdown to Brexit continues. The Bank of England’s Financial Policy Committee (FPC) – the lesser known and lesser important cousin to the Monetary Policy Committee – released notes from its meeting on 23 March concluding that ‘Brexit is a…

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  • When deficits don’t matter

    Did you know that since EU countries signed up the Stability and Growth Pact in 1998, 25 of 28 member countries have broken the rules with no meaningful penalty? By “the rules” I mean an annual deficit-to-GDP ratio of less…

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  • Junk rallies and retirement dreams deferred

    It’s been a nice little rally since 11 February. The FTSE 100 is up 10.8%. Emerging markets are up 16%, if you’re going by the MSCI emerging markets ETF listed on the NYSE. But can the rally be trusted? Is…

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  • Sugar hypocrisy exposed, Dunkirk moment doubted

    Shall we close the week with a few letters? Yes! Let’s… Dear Sir, Having followed Capital & Conflict since its inception, this latest issue, Your Financial Dunkirk Moment, seems to strike a less measured tone. Certainly, if the Brexit vote…

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  • Dollar fall signals momentum crash

    Crack! That sound you hear is the dollar index cracking. Has it peaked? The reaction from this week’s dovish Federal Reserve meeting was delayed. But it finally came yesterday. Crude oil rose by 4.5%. The Dow Jones Industrial Average finally…

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  • Hadrian’s new wall

    The April issue of The Fleet Street Letter went to the printer yesterday. In March, Charlie Morris (the investment director of The Fleet Street Letter) showed UK investors why China has to reform to keep getting rich. In the April…

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  • Vaulting cash and gold

    Imagine for a moment you’re a corporation. And that you’re also a person. Now imagine you’re the world’s second-largest insurance company. Your name is MunichRe. And you’re worried. Why? You’re worried because you do business in Europe. And those clowns…

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  • Budget review

    It’s bad news for George Osborne. Why? The longer that UK rates stay at historic lows, the more likely it is that the economy isn’t growing to its potential. And if that’s happening, then Osborne’s Budget numbers get thrown to…

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  • Comrade Yellen holds forth

    What a sad bunch of speech-listening monetary lackeys we’ve all become. Did you watch Janet Yellen’s press conference yesterday? She is surely a nice enough woman and smart in the way of academics that study money but have never created…

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  • Centralised digital money creation (and destruction)

    This week’s podcast will be up early (probably tomorrow or Thursday). My gold friend John Butler was in. John knows a lot about gold, the gold standard and money. We discussed this particular report in a great deal of detail. If…

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  • “Minus rates” not working

    The British government is taking in more money through taxes than ever before. Yet the deficits remain and the debt gets bigger. Nobody from any of the major political parties is serious about reducing the UK’s ÂŁ1.6 trillion national debt….

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  • Alien intelligence is the new AI

    Last week’s podcast featured another discussion on artificial intelligence (AI). But maybe the correct term is “alien intelligence”, with an important distinction: alien doesn’t mean extraterrestrial. A thinking thing that learns to think in an entirely different way than you…

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  • A big week for central banking

    Osborne may be overshadowed by Bank of England (BoE) Governor Mark Carney. The bank’s Monetary Policy Committee has to walk a high wire when it meets Thursday. The bank reckons Brexit risks a much bigger trade deficit and a crash…

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  • Britain’s fake Conservatives

    The chancellor George Osborne presents his budget on Wednesday at 12:30pm GMT. Before he does, it’s worth wondering whether Britain has real Conservative economic managers at the helm. They’re Tory in name. But are they really Conservative? I’m talking about…

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  • UK trade data and the rotten heart of Europe

    We recorded an exclusive interview between Merryn Somerset Webb (editor-in-chief) of the magazine, and Bernard Connolly, author of The Rotten Heart of Europe. The interview took place yesterday and will be published in two parts next week. It was an absolute…

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  • The end of negative interest rates?

    The banks began pushing back earlier in the week, led, surprisingly, by the Bank for International Settlements (BIS). Negative rates hurt back profitability and increase the risk of a run on banks by depositors, the BIS said in so many…

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  • ECB puts corporate bonds on the shopping list

    Yesterday was full of surprises for central bank watchers. And who isn’t a central bank watcher these days? There are two candidates for the biggest surprise of all. The first is that the ECB’s board put non-bank investment-grade corporate bonds…

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  • Model diamond portfolios

    Yesterday I posed the question of how you’d allocate your funds between four choices: Berkshire Hathaway (Buffett) bonds, Brazilian government bonds, gold and diamonds. Surprisingly, no one took me to task for setting such narrow parameters. But there were some…

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  • Brazil, oil and bear markets

    Two investment issues have come up this week that could benefit from the wisdom and experience of the inimitable Charles Morris. Charlie also responded to my query about an 18% one-day rise in ore prices alongside a 25% year-over-year decline…

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  • Brexit to turn UK into Bolivia

    Britain could be the next Bolivia, according to comments made about the consequences of Brexit. “It is obvious to us that if Britain was outside the EU, we would be as reliant on the third-country rules as Bolivia,” said TheCityUK’s…

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  • Berkshire vs Brazil

    Investors submitted $30 billion worth of bids for just $9 billion of Berkshire bonds on offer this week. They can’t get enough of the stuff! The company will use the proceeds to pay back a $10 billion loan it used…

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