Coal Miner Canaries
“T” was for “turnaround” on Tuesday. And quite possibly for “temporary” considering how erratic markets
“T” was for “turnaround” on Tuesday. And quite possibly for “temporary” considering how erratic markets
Joe Biden is going to “work like hell” to get his economic plan through Congress,
In all likelihood, more banks will follow Goldman in cutting their outlook for US growth
Global equities staged a coordinated selloff Monday as concerns about the spread of the Omicron
It’s official. Inflation isn’t “transitory” anymore. Not that American consumers needed confirmation. And even if
The House passed Joe Biden’s social spending plan on Friday, clearing the way for Joe
Joe Biden on Wednesday noted that jobless claims are down 70% since he took office.
“Generations from now, people will look back and know this is when America won the
Even if central banks stumble into a policy mistake and it all comes crashing down
“No one got everything they wanted in the bill, including me,” Joe Biden said Thursday,
As expected, the US economic expansion faltered in the third quarter, data out Thursday showed.
Referendums and elections are always about human feelings, not about human rationality. If democracy were
The market’s stagflation obsession will be on full display this week as GDP reports out
The data docket is relatively sparse in the US this week. Housing figures, claims and
September payrolls will get top billing in the US this week, while equities look to
Earlier this year, when the retail “meme” mania was in full swing, I suggested the
Dysfunction in Washington finally caught up to previously bulletproof US equities this week. Markets felt
Americans were subjected to a series of highly unfortunate soundbites on Sunday, as US lawmakers
Last week’s bond selloff puts the spotlight on rates in the week ahead. Although some
“Despite most of Street being at December, I still think there’s a real chance for
Market participants will spend the week talking about inflation and COVID. That means this week
“We’re informed by past experience,” Christine Lagarde said Thursday, following the unveil of new forward
$3.5 trillion is “a lot of money,” Democrat Jon Tester ventured. That was one gem
It’s not a blank check, but it’s a start. Senate Democrats took a significant step
Fund managers are demonstrably less enthusiastic about reflation and growth, suggesting the macro narrative that
It’s eminently possible that everything worth saying about markets and the outlook for the economy
It’s nice to see some initiative, but I’ll admit to being a bit annoyed when
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