Saturday, April 26, 2014

Global markets start to realize the risks of Russia's move into Ukraine

As the unrest in Ukraine gets more real by the day, the financial markets start to show signs of caution. In macroeconomic parlance, there are early signs of a persistent momentum move unfolding, and you might want to get ahead of it. Investors start to seek shelter

Russia's debt-rating gets trimmed to one notch above junk status, which is probably at least one notch above where it should be. A slow and steady selloff of Russian assets

Kerry warns Putin to stop the Russian military drills or he might be forced to issue another stern warning. Don't make me stop this car

The U.S. manufacturing renaissance that Schwab's Liz Ann Sonders has been promising for years is finally starting to show up. The data show U.S. manufacturing has reached No. 2 behind China in terms of global competitiveness. Worker productivity has doubled since the 1960s

But the housing recovery has stalled in a big way. Housing in U.S. cools as rate rise hits sales

Peter Schiff remains outside the mainstream sense of reality with another prediction of gold at $5,000 an ounce. Consensus expectations for the U.S. recovery and Fed actions are all wrong

The SEC, following the lead of last year's Finra warning, plans to take a closer look at alternative strategy mutual funds. Spending six months studying 25 funds

Five examples of how international sanctions work, or are supposed to work. The U.S. and Iran have been at loggerheads for 35 years

No comments:

Post a Comment