If stock prices are going to start plunging just because inflation is running a little bit hotter than expected, what is going to happen once the market finally realizes that the entire economy is literally starting to come apart at the seams?
Last week's headlines were understandably dominated the special counsel's report which chronicled President Biden's "diminished faculties and faulty memory".
In a commentary, Neil Callanan of Bloomberg highlighted, "The commercial real estate crash unfolding in the US is a natural consequence of quantitative easing."
In a recent statement posted to social media, Tucker Carlson explained succinctly his many reasons for traveling to Russia to interview President Vladimir Putin.
While price hikes for subscription services might seem like a smart short-term solution to boost revenue and income, they tend to become more of a gamble in times of fracturing markets.
A New York Fed survey published earlier this week indicated that, in the fourth quarter of 2023, auto loan delinquencies reached levels not seen since right after the Great Recession more than a decade ago.
One month ago we asked a simple question: at a time when the Biden admin is breathlessly taking credit for a quote-unquote "strong" job market, how is it not the biggest political talking point right now that since October 2019, native-born US worker
In the landscape of economic foresight, John Exter, a distinguished hard money advocate and former precious metals expert for The Fed, offers a model that resonates with the principles upheld here at SchiffGold.
Having seen the share price collapse to its lowest since 1997, following the regional lender's reporting of a surprising (and large) loss for Q4 and slashing its dividend (to 5c vs 17c exp), ratings agency Moody's has cut all long-term and some short
Driven by eye-watering interest rates and turbulent economic conditions, U.S. banks and private lenders are slamming on the brakes and back-peddling on new loan and credit card applications, deliberately tightening standards and making it harder for
According to the New York Fed, total household debt in the United States increased by 212 billion dollars during the fourth quarter of 2023. It is now sitting at a grand total of 17.5 trillion dollars.
According to the Fed's "preferred" inflation measure, the Personal Consumption Expenditures Index (PCE)--you know, the one that excepts those extraneous things you never buy, things like food and gas--well, according to recent PCE readings th
• https://www.lewrockwell.com, By Karen Kwiatkowski
The current US government has become "a form of fraud that … pays profits to earlier investors with funds from more recent investors" – in other words, a Ponzi scheme.
They are taking gaslighting to a whole new level in 2024. The raw, unadjusted figures that the Bureau of Labor Statistics just released say that the U.S. economy lost more than 2.6 million jobs last month.
Nearly half of America's homeless population - some 42 percent - lives in nine Western states stretching from Alaska and Montana to Arizona and Hawaii.
Friend of Fringe Finance Mark B. Spiegel of Stanphyl Capital released his most recent investor letter on January 31, 2024, with his updated take on the market's valuation and his longstanding bet against Tesla.
Day after day, more large companies are announcing mass layoffs. Why would all of these large companies be doing this if the outlook for the U.S. economy is promising?
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