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  • Ride the wave

    but be prepared, every party comes to an end eventuallly We see cheap money working. The stock markets soar, and that means the dangers are getting higher and higher. You can try to ride the stock inflation wave as long as possible, but be prepared to get burned on your way. Do realize some gains even...
    Posted to F Dominicus Blog by Friedrich Dominicus on Tue, May 7 2013
    Filed under: central banks, inflation, stock exchange, cheap credit, money driven boom
  • Did Bernanke prevent deflation?

    Which one of the following views do you think is the correct one? 1) bernanke printed a lot of money, there was low price inflation, but there would have been huge price deflation if he had not printed. The money printing prevented deflation. 2) bernanke printed a lot of money, and this did cause big...
    Posted to Economics Questions by Maurizio Colucci on Sat, Apr 20 2013
  • Price Transparency during high inflation

    Central banks around the world are printing gigantic amounts of money, we are now entering a truly uncharted territory (old news I know). Which leads me to my question, how will people and businesses conduct trade under a period of high inflation in regards to price transparency? What will be the most...
    Posted to Economics Questions by rosstaylor on Thu, Mar 7 2013
  • Re: A Fall in Purchasing Power? The Inflation Fallacy

    Mon. 12/12/17 22:22 EST . post #240 Then of course, there's bracket creep : [quote]A situation where inflation pushes income into higher tax brackets. The result is an increase in income taxes but no increase in real purchasing power.[/quote]
    Posted to Economics Questions by MMMark on Mon, Dec 17 2012
  • Why Financial Repression Will Fail

    Excessive leverage and risk in the financial system, e.g., using customer funds to speculate, never ends well. Stock market crashes, bank and investment firm failures or economic recessions are all potential consequences. Following the failure of the United States to regulate over the counter (OTC) derivatives...
    Posted to Hera by Ron Hera on Fri, Nov 16 2012
    Filed under: Federal reserve, CPI, deflation, inflation, GDP, IMF, Great Depression, CDS, unemployment, debt monetization, too big to fail, International Monetary Fund, Gross Domestic Product, Consumer Price Index, MBS, mortgage backed securities, over the counter derivatives, European Central Bank, ECB, Baltic Dry Index, sovereign default, bank failure, credit default swaps, BDI, monetary policy, OMT, recession, stock market crash, liquidity, QE3, quantitative easing III, systemic collapse, outright monetary transactions, market intervention, stagflation, tax increases, austerity measures, savings, U.S. Treasury, bank credit, stagnation, economic opportunity, Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke, instability, entrepreneurship, public funds, jobs, financial crisis, operation twist, bond yields, living standards, financial repression, Carmen M. Reinhart, OTC derivatives. Glass-Steagall Act, interest rates, net loss, middle class, consumer incomes, innovation, economic recovery
  • The Real Estate Bubble and Owners' Equivalent Rent

    Economists of the Austrian School understand that monetary expansion has the effect of making things more expensive than they otherwise would have been. At the root of the real-estate bubble was Federal Reserve monetary expansion funneled into the purchase of mortgages by Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, and...
    Posted to Economics Questions by hjmaiere on Mon, Nov 12 2012
  • Financial Crime Is A Systemic Risk

    Famed Austrian economist Ludwig von Mises wrote in his seminal work, Human Action (originally published by the Yale University Press in 1949), that “There is no means of avoiding the final collapse of a boom brought about by credit expansion. The alternative is only whether the crisis should come...
    Posted to Hera by Ron Hera on Tue, Oct 23 2012
    Filed under: Federal reserve, inflation, BRIC, Gold, IMF, OPEC, CDS, OTC derivatives, unemployment, Ben Bernanke, Brazil, debt monetization, RMB, U.S. dollar, International Monetary Fund, European Central Bank, ECB, Austrian economics, crude oil, LIBOR, mortgage fraud, securities fraud, Baltic Dry Index, sovereign default, state sponsored terrorism, FASB, bank failure, credit default swaps, HFT, BDI, monetary policy, money laundering, debt levels, European Monetary Union, OMT, SDRs, debt downgrade, forclosure fraud, GAAP, Australia, zero percent interest rate policy, collapse, recession, stock market crash, High-Frequency Trading, gross notional amount, Ludwig von Mises, consumers, liquidity, deficit spending, Greece, Italy. unfunded liabilities, United Arab Emirates, Russia, QE3, quantitative easing III, South America, London Interbank Offered Rate, hyperinflation. gross credit exposure, Generally Accepted Accounting Principles, systemic collapse, EMU, SML. Special Drawing Rights, mark-to-market rule, Africa. Sistema de Pagamentos em Moeda Local, renminbi, ZIRP, Japan, ISDA, Human Action, sovereign debt crisis, Spain, ATS, India and China, Financial Accounting Standards Board, over the counter, Automated Trading Systems, International Swaps and Derivatives Association, Iran, South Africa, Europe, depression, financial markets, Portugal, Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries, outright monetary transactions, Los Zetas, UAE
  • Comparing inflation between countries and inside the eurozone

    While German inflation is 2% (Germany is the engine of Europe) http://www.global-rates.com/economic-indicators/inflation/consumer-prices/cpi/germany.aspx More inflation data here: http://www.global-rates.com/economic-indicators/inflation/inflation.aspx (Not on the list) Maltese inflation is 4.4% and...
    Posted to Economics Questions by liberation on Mon, Oct 15 2012
  • Does reality hit back?

    One may start wondering. Is it time that reality hits back? That money printing is a problem and not a cure? At least it seems so. In Germany the economy encounters troubles, the export oriented firms (we do have a lot of them) see that the other countries can not buy that much any more. That can't...
    Posted to F Dominicus Blog by Friedrich Dominicus on Sat, Sep 1 2012
    Filed under: inflation, markets, money printing, stupditiy
  • No End in Sight to Financial Crime Wave | Ron Hera on Greg Hunter’s USAWatchdog.com (video)

    By Greg Hunter's USAWatchdog.com - "We are in a computer generated dream world . . . because everything is rigged." That's what Ron Hera of Heraresearch.com said this week when interviewed about living in an age he calls "The end of cheap everything." The system isn't...
    Posted to Hera by Ron Hera on Thu, Jul 19 2012
    Filed under: Federal reserve, deflation, inflation, economic collapse, financial fraud, corruption, Bank of England, fiat money, Barclays, fractional reserve banking, crime wave, market rigging, LIBOR, collusion, fascism
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