While not its base case (unlike JPM and Citi) Goldman Sachs was expecting an adverse outcome from this weekend's negotiations, and admits that this morning's pre-deal announcment "is thus a positive surprise, at least from a shorter-run, tactical per
Despite the euphoria in global equity markets, The FT's Wolfgang Munchau - once one of the keenest euro enthusiasts - warns regime change is coming in Europe.
• http://www.thedailysheeple.com, By Stefan Molyneux
When debt consumes a country and its financial system collapses – who will pay? Who will be held responsible for the bad decisions, the debt and the malinvestment?
There never was going to be any deal. All along, Germany has been seeking to establish conditions that would never be met so that they could force Greece out of the eurozone.
The Independent Greeks, the junior coalition party in Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras' government, are refusing to back the deal he negotiated in Brussels.
The drama over Greece's financial crisis continues to dominate the headlines. As this column is being written, a deal may have been reached providing Greece with yet another bailout if the Greek government adopts new "austerity" measures.
The drama over Greece's financial crisis continues to dominate the headlines. As this column is being written, a deal may have been reached providing Greece with yet another bailout if the Greek government adopts new "austerity" measures.
From the Balkans to the Baltic the marathon talks have carved deep divisions within the EU and left intense unease about Germany's increasingly raw power
Prime Minister Tsipras got the backing of the Greeks for a tough line against the EU, now he has it for a complete change of course. So… where's everybody going?
Europe braced itself for its most fateful day in years on Sunday as presidents, prime ministers, and chancellors congregated in Brussels for a summit to decide whether Greece remains in the euro single currency.
Spontaneous combustion. Alien invasion. Zombie apocalypse. What do these have in common? Their likelihood is next to impossible. So why worry? This is how people tend to think about the financial system.
Greek Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras has proposed eleventh hour concessions to European central banks despite the overwhelming rejection of an austerity deal by the Greek people.
Leaders of the campaign to take Britain out of the European Union point to Norway or Switzerland as examples of how countries can thrive outside the EU's embrace.
We have explained on a number of occasions how the Federal Reserves' agents, the bullion banks (principally JPMorganChase, HSBC, and Scotia) sell uncovered shorts ("naked shorts") on the Comex (gold futures market) in order to drive down an oth
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