Capital & Conflict – brought to you by Fortune & Freedom Yesterday’s Fortune & Freedom explained how central bankers have managed to avoid acknowledging the side-effects of their misbehaviour for so long. But the trends which kept a lid on…
Please be aware that the Capital & Conflict website is no longer being updated.
But, if you’re ready to take back control of your money and get intelligent insight, in plain English, about the threats to your money and how to avoid them – then look no further.
Get access to our free bulletin Fortune & Freedom – your 100% FREE daily insight into the truth about your money – behind the headlines, jargon and spin.
Sign up today for FREE, and start getting my market insights delivered to your inbox every day…
GET FREE ACCESS NOW!Capital & Conflict – brought to you by Fortune & Freedom Yesterday’s Fortune & Freedom explained how central bankers have managed to avoid acknowledging the side-effects of their misbehaviour for so long. But the trends which kept a lid on…
Capital & Conflict – brought to you by Fortune & Freedom What happens when you mistake a symptom for a disease? Because that’s just what central bankers are doing right now. And their mistake is all that’s keeping stocks afloat….
In keeping with what Boaz Shoshan and John Butler spoke about, let’s kick off today’s Fortune & Freedom with a clever point made by a reader about the collapse of the global reserve currency, the US dollar…
If you liked the tech bubble and the housing bubble, you’re going to hate the consumer price inflation bubble.
My daughter, much like the stock market, is at that age when she can’t quite communicate what she wants, but all hell breaks loose if she doesn’t get it.
Is the Bank of England addicted to QE? Or did the pot call the kettle black?
The UK’s exports to the EU have surged well above pre-referendum and pre-Brexit averages. What does it mean for UK politics going forward if Project Fear is vanquished?
CHEDDAR, SOMERSET – What is it about the subject of finance that lends itself so much to squid metaphors?
In 2010, Rolling Stone famously described Goldman Sachs as “a great vampire squid wrapped around the face of humanity, relentlessly jamming its blood funnel into anything that smells like money.”
THE HOWFF, DUNDEE – Political agendas favouring renewable energy (such as the “Green New Deal” which we see touted in the States) are, like all political agendas, polarising issues. There was a time when investors could remain “above the fray”…
SODERMALM, STOCKHOLM – It’s all so damned… banal. Source: The Telegraph Our monetary oracle has spoken. Behold his wisdom. From The Telegraph: A widely used digital currency could pave the way for negative interest rates by making it harder to…
SODERMALM, STOCKHOLM – There’s not even a flicker of hesitation in their eyes. Unflinching, unconscious of the awkward guarded manoeuvres now practiced in blighty… the Swedes squeeze past you on a supermarket shopping aisle. It’s strange how something that was…
Take a moment to think about the following phrase: “risk-free rate of return”. It’s part of the everyday language of finance – one of those terms bandied about so much that we rarely stop to think about what it actually…
THE NAVIGATION INN, STAFFORDSHIRE – “No interest? No problem!” So cry investors as the Italian government beats them bloody with a brand new stick: the zero-coupon bond. While it’s the first time the Italian government has been able to get…
THE ECCLIAN, STAFFORDSHIRE – A hot air balloon hangs above the horizon like a dreamcatcher for the county. And the last squeezes of sunshine the season has to offer linger warm in the air. It’s a fine day indeed. And…
So here we are again dear reader, at the end of another wild week. It’s been a barnstormer for precious metals, as we’ve been writing about in recent days. We’re also seeing further signs of exhaustion in the tech sector,…
Some more comedy relief to start us off today. This statement comes courtesy of the European Central Bank (ECB), via its Twitter account: ECB asset purchases have reduced inequality in the eurozone, our research shows. They have especially benefited low-income…
DELRAY BEACH, FLORIDA – Stocks got off to a rough start on Monday. Heavy equipment maker Caterpillar reported punk numbers; investors took it as a sign that the world economy is slowing. That’s our guess too. Night Is Day After…
Getting hammered in a central bank is an experience reserved only for the financial elite. The idea of proles like you or I knocking back drinks in such ivory towers borders on heresy. But believe it or not, the Public…
The French central bank on fire… fork lifts rammed into banks and the ministry of finance… brutal fights between riot police and protestors… cars set ablaze… and yet the market is still willing to lend to the French government at…
I read a history of the Bank of England (BoE) last year. It wasn’t very exciting. Even when armed guards took up positions to protect the bank from riots and during the war, not much happened. But one thing did…
The financial news looks like my Netflix account after watching the wrong movie. The recommended viewing section has been invaded by zombies, bombs and vigilantes. The Bank of International Settlements is warning about “The rise of zombie firms”, which are…
If the government set the price of coffee or coal, you’d know what to expect. A mess. There’d be shortages and surpluses, quality problems, questionable business practices in the industry, and suspicious links between politicians and big business. But even…
4 July 1989. As Americans awoke to celebrate Independence Day, a lone Soviet fighter jet took off from Poland and began flying west. The pilot of the MiG-23 “Flogger” did not explain himself as he soared across Europe. Crossing Polish…
Bond investors are turning to John Denver songs to make money. Yes, you read that right. Country Roads and Leaving on a Jet Plane have become a substitute for bonds. Such is the state of the fixed income market. Who…
With Australia and Germany out, your editor’s interest in the World Cup has halved. But Japan and England play tonight. Yesterday, in anticipation of the game, I bought beer made by the Bank of Japan (BoJ). At a shopping centre…
What sort of policies will be passed under the cover of Brexit? My worry is that you can twist the referendum any way you like and claim a mandate for whatever you want. As long as you include the word…
It turns out that investing is really very simple… in a way. Howard Wang of Convoy Investments explains that investment prices are driven by the amount of money and the amount of assets. Asset price = quantity of money/supply of…
YOUGHAL, IRELAND – Our screen last Friday was showing the 10-year U.S. Treasury Note with a yield of 3.11% – further evidence that the credit cycle has turned. Everything else is noise. Primary Trend We got the idea from the…
A spat about bank capital hit the news late last week. Not only is the topic immensely boring, but it’s also completely misguided. That should make you stop reading, unless you’re aware of the implications. If banking were to blow…
Warning: your bank does NOT want you to read this report Deep down, you probably knew something wasn’t quite right. It’s a decade since the global financial crisis. It was a unique moment in history – a single event that…
ON THE CELTIC SEA – We drove up to Cherbourg yesterday, boarded a ferry, and are now cruising towards Ireland. The trip takes nearly an entire day, but the wifi works onboard… so we were able to stay in contact….
An apex predator is an animal at the top of the food chain, with prey to hunt, but no predator to fear. They are the royalty of an ecosystem. Beasts are often used as symbols to explain the abstractions of…
Everyone agrees. The biggest risk to the markets is obvious. Central bankers are swapping quantitative easing (QE) for quantitative tightening (QT). And QT could make the world blow up in all sorts of ways. Citibank credit strategist Matt King told…
The FTSE 100 is back where it was 18 years ago. Less than half the companies from back then are still in the index today. The Goldman Sachs Commodity Index is back where it started too. The oil price touched…
GUALFIN, ARGENTINA – Friday evening after the bell rang on the New York Stock Exchange, traders and analysts, sell side and buy side, 2018 quants and deep value dinosaurs, million-dollar-a-year partners as well as the order takers and clerks, all…
Getting into a sports stadium is always easier than getting out. Unless you leave early. The stockmarket is much the same. Up the escalator and down the elevator is the mantra describing the nature of the stockmarket’s booms and busts….
Australia didn’t even have a recession in 2008 or 2009. China’s enormous stimulus programme and a wave of immigration saw to that. It was a demonstration of the power of countercyclicality. As long as some parts of the world are…
GUALFIN, ARGENTINA – Over the weekend, we went to visit our new property. The house, which we are renovating, is on the far side of the river. We’re just realizing what a challenge that poses. In order to get over to…
GUALFIN, ARGENTINA – Investors were cheered up last Friday by the jobs report, which showed that the number of new jobs is about equal to the high set back in 2006 – just before the last crisis. As near as…
GUALFIN, ARGENTINA – Another miracle! It rained. “We got 200 millimeters (about 8 inches) this year,” reported the capataz, Gustavo. After two years of drought, finally, the fields, mountains, and pastures are green. And the river that separates the house…
The corruption or debasement of currency is seen as the action of an empire or civilisation that is in decline, or even about to collapse. The Roman Empire’s debasement of its money (currencies such as the denarius and sestertius) in…
BUENOS AIRES, ARGENTINA – We went to dinner last night at a little neighborhood restaurant in Palermo Soho. It was already crowded when we arrived after 9 p.m., with a warm buzz of conversation. But scarcely had we been there…
Trainspotting provides today’s economic analysis. The movie is about a drug addict’s attempts to come clean. It doesn’t go so well. Perhaps because he’s trying to do it in Scotland. In the end, he steals thousands of pounds from his…
Today’s Capital & Conflict comes from the latest issue of The Price Report by investment director Tim Price. Within my asset management business, we deal with two levels of emotional responses to the state of the financial markets. At one…
I’ve got so much honey You know the bees envy me I’ve got a sweeter song Oh, than the birds in the trees Oh and I know, I know, I know what you’re gonna say What, what could make me…
YOUGHAL, IRELAND – Ireland is a friendly place. People are relaxed and direct. They tell you things… even without you asking. For example, there seems to be a curse on the property next door. Broken Heart “Oh, yes…” the custodian…
BALLYNATRAY, IRELAND – We have bought a place nearby. But it will be months before it is habitable. In the meantime, we need a place to stay. So we’re renting a place on the estate next door. It’s an apartment built over…
Sometimes things are simple. Perhaps this is one of those times. Stocks are crashing, bonds are stumbling, and investors are worrying. When will it stop? Last week we tried to take stock of what happened so far. And how it…
PARIS – Yesterday’s screens were full of green numbers (things going up). Investors may breathe a sigh of relief. “Whew! Glad that’s over…” they are likely to say. But it’s way too early to relax… and way too late to…
[Editor’s note: because Bill is usually writing from the US, we don’t publish his copy until the day after he’s written it. So if you’re a bit confused as to why he’s predicting events that have already happened, that’s why.]…
… the almighty Fed has printed trillions of dollars in our name to buy worthless mortgage assets from “too big to fail” banks. It has lent these banks our hard-earned money at about 0% interest, so they could lend our…
A recent report from Oxfam revealed that last year, somebody new was anointed as a billionaire every two days. By its estimation, 82% of all the wealth created last year went to the wealthiest 1% on the planet, while the…
The Bayeux Tapestry is coming to Britain. All 70 metres of it. So when can you go and see the embroidered cloth to discover the history of the Norman conquest of England? No, not next week. Not even next month….
BALTIMORE – “Investors Prepare for Inflation,” warned the front page of The Wall Street Journal last Wednesday. “Rising Treasury Yields Ripple Through Markets,” it added on Thursday. “U.S. Treasurys lead bonds sell-off,” the Financial Times piled on, “as investors fear…
Yesterday we looked into stocks. But they’re a sideshow. The financial world really runs on debt. Bonds are the main event. Bond markets are twice the size of stockmarkets. The survival of governments, giant corporates and pensions funds depends on…
The stockmarket is a cyclical thing. Sometimes it goes up, sometimes it goes down. That’s supposed to make the whole thing predictable, in a way. If you’re at the top of the cycle, sell. If you’re at the bottom, buy….
The Bank of Japan has done it! It’s shrunk its balance sheet. Without triggering mass financial panic. Drawing money out of the economy tightens financial conditions in Japan. That’s not what central banks are supposed to be doing when inflation…
“But I don’t want to go among mad people,” Alice remarked. “Oh, you can’t help that,” said the Cat: “we’re all mad here. I’m mad. You’re mad.” “How do you know I’m mad?” said Alice. “You must be,” said the…
BALTIMORE – In all the excitement surrounding the passing of the GOP tax bill, we almost missed it. But on Tuesday, as stocks rose to a record high in anticipation of a huge payoff to corporate America, bonds fell. The…
BALTIMORE – We attended a family wedding in Nicaragua over the weekend. Asked to make a little speech, we opined on the differences between men and women, and the sacred role of marriage… the ultimate and most ancient win-win deal. As…
RANCHO SANTANA, NICARAGUA – As we outlined yesterday, Americans are richer than ever. U.S. household assets stand at $97 trillion. All over the world, “wealth” is surging, too… with the value of global stocks near a record high of $100 trillion….
[Editor’s note: because Bill is usually writing from the US, we don’t publish his copy until the day after he’s written it. So if you’re a bit confused as to why he’s predicting events that have already happened, that’s why….
You’ve heard plenty about Greece’s financial mess, Italy’s non-performing loans and the property busts in Ireland and Spain. We love covering Europe in Capital and Conflict. But the simple truth is, the Eurozone remains a comparatively decent banking sector. At…
Do you remember the retirement of Alan Greenspan? Probably not, everyone seems to want to forget about what happened after 2006. The monetary maestro had presided over an extraordinary period of stability, calm and growth. They called it the Great…
The butterfly effect explains how a fluttering of little wings can trigger a hurricane on the other side of the world. Central bankers have been fluttering their little fingertips over the “0” key, generating trillions in digital money. Today, we…
RANCHO SANTANA, NICARAGUA – If you run over a pedestrian in Washington, D.C., it might be wise to keep going. Because the person under your bumper could be a swamp rat. In fact, it could be Jerome Powell, whom President…
A new high for the stockmarket. Huzzah! Which one? Lots of them! The FTSE 100 hit an all-time high yesterday. The French and German indices last week. The Nasdaq broke an all-time record with 63 all-time highs this calendar year…
It’s an irony of the financial world. The bigger the event, the less anyone cares. Because everyone sees it coming in advance. Everything had already adjusted, the moves were priced in months ago, and all eyes are on the next…
I’ve lost my faith in money printing for today’s Capital & Conflict. It’s always a good idea to ask yourself, “What if I’m wrong?”. Especially when you’ve got Southbank Investment Research’s best and brightest giving you funny looks for temporarily…
POITOU, FRANCE – For nearly two decades, the world’s central banks have labored hard, sweating to coax more digital money out of a stony and grudging economy. More than $20 trillion did they bring forth via QE (buying stocks and…
It must’ve been lonely back in 2006. Warning about the housing bubble back then got you laughed at. Or worse. By the time I showed up on the scene at Southbank Investment Research’s Australian sister in 2010, sceptics had a…
A few years ago, a group of my friends and I had the clever idea to update the lyrics to Billy Joel’s We Didn’t Start the Fire. Adding three decades’ worth of events in song form didn’t go so well….
LISBON, PORTUGAL – In Japan, incumbent prime minister ShinzĹŤ Abe has won a new super majority in parliament. And you know what that means? More laughs. Dumbbell Policies Yes, the whole world is doubling down on dumbbell policies that don’t…
Last week, the German and American stockmarket indices hit symbolic highs. Today, Japan is expected to break a 56-year record. Futures, a de-facto prediction of stockmarket performance before the market opens, were up over the weekend. This morning the actual…
Another day, another symbolic record high for a stockmarket. Yesterday it was the Dax at 13,000. Today the Dow at 23,000. One commentator complained on Twitter that he’d only just received his shipment of a “Dow 22,000” hat. Somebody else…
PARIS – Whoa! Bitcoin is up $1,457 since the start of the month; at writing, one bitcoin sells for $5,670. Look at the Dow. It is on its way to 23,000. And don’t even mention the tech darlings – Facebook,…
PARIS – “Don’t worry. We’re not hysterical like you North Americans.” We had arrived at the security gate at Salta Airport on our trip back from the ranch to Buenos Aires, with an onward ticket to Paris, France. In our…
In September I warned inflation is making a comeback. It’s central bankers’ age-old accountability mechanism. The reason quantitative easing (QE) never worked in the end. It’s not like we haven’t tried money printing. History is littered with examples of it….
BUENOS AIRES, ARGENTINA – First, a news update. The Washington Post: The Republican Party has largely abandoned its platform of fiscal restraint, pivoting sharply in a way that could add trillions of dollars in federal debt over the next decade….
TEMPLECOMBE, ENGLAND – We took the train from Paris to London… and then from London to the village of Templecombe in Somerset. We came to visit a friend. “This was the home of Lord Uxbridge,” our host pointed to an…
“I sell here, Sir, what all the world desires to have – POWER.” Matthew Boulton I’ll buy it. I found that quote on the back of the English ÂŁ50 note. With all the venom that’s been directed at high denomination…
POITOU, FRANCE – We pause. We take a deep breath. We cease our normal sarcasm and kvetching. Today, we give thanks to the global elite… the people to whom we owe so much. Historic High The thought came to us…
POITOU, FRANCE – We took the ferry back to the mainland after our stay on ĂŽle d’Yeu with two kittens in our luggage. The kittens were scheduled for drowning if no homes could be found. Elizabeth volunteered to adopt them. One of…
I’ve just seen the news of another terror attack in London. I hope this letter finds you and your loved ones safe. “A large income is the best recipe for happiness I ever heard of…” “You intend to be very…
Yesterday we finished Capital & Conflict by describing how badly discredited the anti-immigration justification for Brexit is. The figures and the economic justification are simply wrong. But the real reason to favour Brexit is plastered all over the news this…
At the beginning of 2017, a major US bank handed $92 billion over to the US government. It was all “profit” from its operations. How did it make so much, and why did it have to give the money to…
The hurricanes came just in time for the Federal Reserve. Its policy committee faced the challenge of tightening monetary policy in coming months as promised. But chair Janet Yellen may have escaped by the skin of her teeth once more….
What a month we’re in. It could shape up to be the turning point for markets for years to come. September is a bad month for shares, historically. American indices fell in 60% of Septembers since World War 2. And…
In 1992, while the pound was tumbling, the Swedish central bank raised interest rates to 500% to prevent facing the same fate. “Want to make a grown nerd cry? Run that interest rate through his risk model,” wrote Eric Peters,…
Yesterday we pondered the beginning of the end of central bank control… over everything. Stockmarkets, corporate bond markets, house prices, exchange-traded funds (ETFs), mortgage lending and mortgage buying, bank regulation, but most of all government bonds, are in the hands…
The central bankers are at it again. This time by doing nothing. Which still does a lot if you’re a central banker. The world’s money printers and their academic minions met in Jackson Hole, Wyoming last week. The rest of…
Akhil Patel is the odd one out here at Southbank Investment Research. He uses a completely different way of looking at the markets. But if he’s right, then his way of thinking is all you need as an investor. It…
I may have found your black swan. The distant market shock that triggers a local crisis thanks to the long line of dominos reaching around the world and leading to your door. More below. But first, what did some of…
While stockmarkets are suspended from central bank balance sheets like marionettes, financial news isn’t important. The economy, company earnings, demographics, the insolvency of pensions… no, nothing but money printing, and the potential for money printing, matters any longer. Financial markets…
Next week the world’s central bankers head to Jackson Hole for the annual Economic Policy Symposium. And the financial world is fretting over their words more than ever in anticipation of what might be said at the event. Mario Draghi’s…
And it’s time, time, time And it’s time, time, time It’s time, time, time that you love And it’s time, time, time… – Tom Waits POITOU, FRANCE – “So how much did you make last night?” “We made about $15,000,”…
Fear is pulsing through the markets. Analyst after analyst at investment banks around the world are pointing out that only central bank money printing has kept the stockmarket afloat. And central bank money printing is set to decline in 2018….
Central bankers were supposed to manipulate the economy for your benefit. But they’ve become the economy itself. The Swiss central bank has amassed more than ÂŁ550 billion in stocks, bonds and cash. That’s slightly more than the country’s annual GDP….
POITOU, FRANCE – The Dow rose another 100 points on Tuesday. Can anything stop this bull market? At least we know the answer to that question: Yes. When? Longtime Diary sufferers know better than to trust our market timing advice. So rather…
Watching government policies fail is a favourite hobby of mine. The history of economics can’t help but be an illustration on the shortcomings of government for anyone willing to listen. Quantitative easing was supposed to restart inflation so that the…
LAUSANNE, SWITZERLAND – One of the most remarkable conversations on finance we’ve ever had happened here in Lausanne yesterday. “You mean it costs as much to put money on deposit at a bank as it does to borrow it?” We…
It’s a banknote. Couldn’t be much simpler or more taken for granted. You’ve probably never really spared the time to think about what it really is. You just use them without a second thought. And always have. But all around…
Predicting the future has been easy in hindsight. We’re very closely following the script left by Japan, although in fast forward. So we had hindsight right in front of our noses, in a way. The Western world’s tech bubble, housing…
Today we ask ourselves who you’d rather have as your fund manager. There are two options to choose from. The first is Herbert Stein, an American economist who chaired the Council of Economic Advisers under Nixon and was on the…
Most things you can learn from economics are wrong. Figuring out why they’re wrong has plenty of value though. It allows you to predict things that others don’t see. The neutrality of money is a great example. Most people who’ve…
Feathers were thoroughly rustled yesterday. The accounts of Her Majesty’s Treasury were released in all their terrible glory. The fate of Britain’s finances laid bare across 150 pages. Britannia pawned her trident many years ago. It still stands, proud and…
POITOU, FRANCE – This morning, we are wondering: How dumb is the Fed? The question was prompted by this comment by former Fed insider Chris Whalen at The Institutional Risk Analyst blog: [O]ur message to the folks in Jackson Hole this week…
Something broke this morning. Bonds, stocks and commodities all fell. Government bond yields around the world surged. Australia in particular got kicked in the shins all round with a jump in bond yields and a big drop in stocks. Why…
There are two types of governments in this world. Those who can print money and those who can’t. The distinction will define your investing success. It already has, actually. Stock markets in countries with a printing press are doing just…
“Even God Himself could not sink this ship.” – Titanic crewman… The ship sank four days later “It is our will that this state shall endure for a thousand years.” – Adolf Hitler… 10 years before the Reich was destroyed…
The markets’ central bank fetish is getting out of hand. The money manipulators were out in force yesterday. Their words moved markets all around the world. Nothing else seems to matter these days, so let’s delve into what’s going on….
The fixers are back. They promise us stability, wealth and safety. Will you buy in? Times have changed, though. Strongmen now come in the form of Janet Yellen, chairperson of the Federal Reserve. And they literally want you to buy…
The Austrian business cycle theory (ABCT) explains how central bankers engineer the booms and busts they’re supposed to prevent or mitigate. Ever since the theory was first derided by the German historical school economists, it was picked up by investors…
Predicting the next crisis is easy. It’ll happen when the central bankers want it to happen. This isn’t some sort of conspiratorial claim. It’s straightforward economics. Investment bank Goldman Sachs took a look at the trigger for recessions in the…
LONDON – “Nothing but bad news in the paper,” a colleague saves us the trouble of reading it ourselves. “A building caught fire here in London. Dozens dead. A guy opened fire on Republicans at a baseball field. He shot…
Say you knew somebody who had recently suffered a near fatal drug overdose. What would you suggest they do? Hopefully, your answer to that question is not “Take some more!” The idea of treating an excess of something with even…
It’s all about debt. We spend on our credit cards, even when there’s enough money in the bank. Business finances inventories with credit and equipment with loans. Houses are purchased with mortgages and cars with car loans. Education with education…
Predicting the Japanese bond market will crash is known as the Widowmaker trade. If you take a look at the fundamentals, the conclusion is obvious. A bond market crash in Japan has to happen. But it should’ve happened a very…
GUALFIN, ARGENTINA – “The U.S. Economy Is Back on Track,” read a Bloomberg headline over the weekend. Apparently, inflation and consumer spending picked up last month. We are so glad to hear it. And last week, New York Fed President…
Central bankers are tasked with making our economy run smoothly. But what if central bank policies are the cause of economic problems, not the solution to them? Britain used to have the National Coal Board, the British Gas Corporation, and…
With the swish of his pen, Bank of England governor Mark Carney can make your mortgage cheaper or more expensive. He can change how much it costs the UK government to borrow money too. And the interest rate on savings…
The secret to walking on a tightwire is looking where you’re going. Not at your feet and the plunge either side of the cable! At the fixed point you’re hoping to make it to. Preferably without a chunk of your…
It’s been five long years. But the American central bank can finally claim victory. After five years of undershooting, it’s hit its inflation target at last. America’s year-over-year PCE deflator hit 2.1% in February. That’s impressively close to its 2%…
Today’s Capital & Conflict continues the theme of stockmarket crashes. They’ve been banned. Someone should put up a sign on the corner of Threadneedle Street and Princes Street – “Stockmarket crashes prohibited, by order of the Bank of England”. Over…
The world’s stockmarkets reached an all-time high yesterday. Based on the MSCI All Country World Index, we’re above 2007’s peak. Whoop-dee-doo! It’s a bit embarrassing to have only just surpassed the peak from ten years ago. Stockmarkets are supposed to…
Today’s Capital & Conflict is about the biggest change to the world economy in ten years. It’s happening slowly. But it will be the sea change that sets the scene for the next ten years of investing. The government doesn’t…
GUALFIN, ARGENTINA – The Dow rose 174 points on Thursday. And Treasury Secretary Steve Mnuchin said we’d have a new tax system by the end of the year. Animal spirits were restless. But which animals? Dumb oxes? Or wily foxes?…
Yesterday we looked into how tightening monetary policy is just stimulus in disguise. Even if central banks raise interest rates, as they did in the US recently, they’re still spiking the economic punch bowl. We’re practically a bunch of drunks!…
The Federal Reserve moved interest rates up 0.25% last week. The US stockmarket jumped. Market commentators are mystified by the paradox. But it’s not hard to explain. Or to invest accordingly. Today you’ll discover when a hawk is really a…
It’s the beginning of a busy week. The Dutch elections are tomorrow. And both the Bank of England and Federal Reserve are due to announce their updated manipulation of interest rates on Wednesday. President Donald Trump is expected to send…
The Capital & Conflict mailbag is brimming with your letters again. And this time, I’ve been forced to do something radical. When you get a letter like the one below, there’s only one thing you can do… Before I explain…
Well now. It seems my letter yesterday about how rich retirees feel has really struck a chord. The consensus? The figures may say retirees today are richer than those in work. But it doesn’t feel like it! That’s because there’s…
LOVINGSTON, VIRGINIA – Amid all the sound and fury of the Trump news cycle, hardly anyone noticed. There is a specter haunting this economy. It is the specter of inflation… Exterminating Angel Bloomberg has the report:
BALTIMORE – Again, the Dow was scheduled to go over the psychologically important 20,000-point mark yesterday. And again, it backed off. We are studying the life and times of former Fed chief Alan Greenspan. Not that we expect to discover…
Should the bank of England have seen the 2008 financial crisis coming? Everyone’s favourite economist Andrew Haldane – chief Bank of England economist and “let’s abolish cash and impose negative interest rates” proponent – certainly thinks so. He may or…
Let’s look beyond the weekend to what is likely to be the defining financial story of next week. In five days’ time – next Wednesday – the Federal Reserve meets to decide its next move for US interest rates. The…
You may have seen details of Mark Carney’s speech earlier in the week reported in the press. The headline story was Carney’s claim that we’re experiencing our first “lost decade” in terms of income growth since the 1860s. There was…
In today’s Capital & Conflict… a trillion dollar loss in the bond market… inflation rising… the new monetary playbook… what is MFFP?… introducing a map for your money… and more Ouch. Hidden behind the madness of last week’s momentous events,…
Will the UK monetary system have a new master by the end of the week? It just might. It seems autumn 2016 could be shaping up to be the “crowded hour” of UK monetary policy in the 21st century. At…
A guest essay from Jim Rickards, editor of Strategic Intelligence. The greatest debt debacle of all time is staring us in the face. Don’t take it from me. The International Monetary Fund (IMF) agrees. It’s one thing when frantic voices…
It may come as a shock to people in Britain but the Bank of England (BoE) wants a weaker pound. Why would that be true? Well, as I’m sure you know only too well: the BoE wants inflation – it…
On the old pilgrims’ road to Rome lies a public square. Off the square is an imposing gothic building that has stood since before the Renaissance, fronted with a huge wooden door. Behind that door lie the headquarters of the…
“You have been weighed in the balances and found wanting.” According to the Bible that’s the message from God to King Belshazzar in ancient times. I reference it because today we’re going to talk judgement. Not the divine kind. But…
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…
When you attend a conference called When Banking Dies, you don’t necessarily expect anyone to stand up and say “It’s time to buy the banks.” But that’s exactly what Charlie Morris did on Monday. In a day of intriguing and…
We’re at the start of a banking civil war. It will destroy the traditional way of banking. It will also yield very real opportunities for income investors willing to think outside the box. Occasionally I receive emails from readers who…
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…
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…
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…
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…
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….
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…
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…
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…
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,…
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…
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…
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…
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…
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…
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,…
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…
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…
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…
On Thursday 30th June, Mark Carney gave his first significant speech since the immediate aftermath of the referendum result. Before we get to that, I have a question for you. Who is the more powerful and significant figure when it…
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…
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…
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…
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…
“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…
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…
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…
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…
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…
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…
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…
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…
$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…
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…
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…
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…
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…
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…
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…
Poor old Bank of England Governor Mark Carney. Did you see him in front of the Treasury committee in Parliament this morning? He couldn’t have made his job any more difficult if he tried. The reason? The Bank of England…
If you’re a central bank junky, you’re going to love the next two weeks. First, the European Central Bank (ECB) meets on Thursday. Analysts expect the bank to take the overnight deposit rate from negative 0.3 to negative 0.5—but only…
Earlier in the week I examined whether the Twilight Zone is back. Is bad news good news for the stock market thanks to the increased likelihood of a government or central bank intervention? Well Mr Market gave us a decisive answer since…
If negative rates don’t spark inflation (but just a little bit, to the 2% target most central banks have) and if they tend to erode bank profits and thereby make the financial system less stable and more prone to “accident,”…
You’re seeing the banking elite’s version of a blitzkrieg (lighting war). Yes, I’m talking again about the war on cash. With the trouble in Europe’s banking sector, limiting how much cash people can hold is moving to the top of…
Care to make a guess about what’s caused the “tipping point” for gold? Is it the margin squeeze on banks created by negative interest rates? Banks are a bad business to be in these days. If they hold excess reserves…
If you do one thing this week, ignore the false sense of currency strength coming out of China. I told you that Chinese central bank governor Zhou Xiaochuan told the press there was no basis for further depreciation in the…
Sweden is further along the way to a cashless economy than any other country
One of Germany’s largest daily newspapers has published an emotional appeal to its readers to save the country’s cash from abolition.
All eyes are on chair of the US Federal Reserve, Janet Yellen, today, as she fronts the US Congress.
Japan’s negative interest rate policy isn’t doing what it’s supposed to do.
A pet rock could do Mark Carney’s job at the moment.
Cash gets in the way of central bankers and policy makers getting what they want. Cash must be destroyed.
The Bank of Japan joins the ECB and central banks in Sweden, Switzerland, and Denmark in the war on cash, by taking interestrates negative.
Like a chastened lover trying to make up after an argument, the US Fed tried to assure investors that, even though it raised interest rates last year, it will only do again gradually.
China has warned infamous currency speculator George Soros from targeting the yuan.
One story I’d like to see investigated is whether governments will default on their bonds this year.
Mark Carney’s appearance before Parliament won’t to do much for the markets. . That’s not the case with the US Federal Reserve or the Bank of Japan.
Norway’s largest bank has no idea what people are doing with 60% of Norway’s cash. So it wants to ban cash.
The Bank of England would do less damage to the economy by doing nothing. But if you’re going to do nothing, why bother to exist in the first place?
For one day, investors were happy with the US interest rate rise. But they won’t be laughing if it pops the bond bubble.
The Fed took away removed the punch bowl, turned the house lights up, and raised interest rates. Now comes the hangover.
The US Federal Reserve is on a “kamikaze mission to raise interest rates”. But China’s refusing to go along for the ride.
No one really knows how banks will fare if and when the next credit crisis hits.
The stonger US dollar is going to create havoc in emerging-markets, as their dollar-denominated debt explodes.
Central bankers are trying things they’ve never done before, and they have no idea what the results will be. They’re making it up as they go along.
The markets’ reaction to the ECB announcement on quantitative easing demonstrates just how much power central bankers have. Here, Tim Price looks at how long a system this dysfunctional can last.
There is a subtle kind of violence to low interest rates. You know you’re being mugged, but there’s not much you can do about it.
In the latest battle in the war on cash the Greek government is compelling its citizens to register their cash and valuables with the state.
The world of negative interest continues to get crazier, says Dan Denning, causing further distortions to the market. And all in response to a sovereign debt crisis.
With bond yields slowly turning negative, the stocks in your pension portfolio are going to have to work doubly hard if you want any chance of a decent retirement.
China’s yuan is set to be added to the basket of currencies making up the SDR – the IMF’s global currency. What happens next?
The ECB’s executive board is split on whether to pursue a more ambitious asset purchase programme, or stick to a policy of ‘fiscal prudence’.
In Switzerland, bank customers are now being charged to deposit their cash, It won’t be long before it happens here, too.
Turn the page, people, turn the page. The third quarter is over. They’re only days on a calendar, but maybe the new quarter – with, perhaps, a focus on actual earnings by real businesses – will be better for investors…
Meet Michael Unterguggenberger. Who?! He’s the architect of a little-known monetary experiment in 1932 that may soon make a comeback – on a global scale. Michael Unterguggenberger was mayor of the Austrian town of Wörgl in 1932, during the depths…
If you don’t know who Robert Triffin is, you should read this closely. Triffin was a Belgian economist who lived from 1911–1993. He was regarded as one of the leading authorities on gold, currencies and the international monetary system during…
More trouble in the commodity markets overnight. Australian stocks down hard. Look out for our honorary Australian Dan Denning’s analysis of that in just a second. But before we get to that, let’s check in on our old friend Jeremy…
With the Bank of England’s chief economist openly advocating abolishing ‘paper currency’ and imposing negative interest rates, the writing is on the wall for cash, says Nick O’Connor,
The re-introduction of wolves to America’s Yellowstone National Park had all sorts of unintended consequences. Much like the meddling of central banks, says Nick O’Connor.
In their attempts to keep the markets happy in the face of serious problems, central bankers are distorting the reality of the financnial world, says Nick O’Connor.
The very basis of capitalism and what it means to be an investor is being systematically destroyed by the financial authorities, says Nick O’Connor.
Central banks claim to set interest rates for the benefit of all. But the way they manipulate the price of money is hurting all but a very small elite.
From time to time we may tell you about regulated products issued by Southbank Investment Research Limited. With these products your capital is at risk. You can lose some or all of your investment, so never risk more than you can afford to lose. Seek independent advice if you are unsure of the suitability of any investment. Southbank Investment Research Limited is authorised and regulated by the Financial Conduct Authority. FCA No 706697. https://register.fca.org.uk/.
© 2021 Southbank Investment Research Ltd. Registered in England and Wales No 9539630. VAT No GB629 7287 94.
Registered Office: 2nd Floor, Crowne House, 56-58 Southwark Street, London, SE1 1UN.
Terms and conditions | Privacy Policy | Cookie Policy | FAQ | Contact Us | Top ↑