We’re Probably Not Going To Make It
Over the years, I’ve created any number of simple, “burning Earth” collages for articles documenting
Over the years, I’ve created any number of simple, “burning Earth” collages for articles documenting
“Our credibility is on the line here,” an unapologetic Jim Bullard said Monday, reiterating concerns
“How can this possibly end well?”, America’s largest bank wondered, in a new note. It
Richard Clarida bought some stocks last year. Specifically, he shifted between $1 million and $5
“You’re going to have a secondary hit,” one shipbroker told Bloomberg on Friday. In a
“Does any innovation in the crypto ecosystem look promising to you?,” Goldman’s Allison Nathan asked
Everything has always been about revenge. That is his curse, but, at this political moment,
Joe Biden wants to tax corporations at a higher rate in order to help offset
Monday was supposed to be the day when the purportedly systemic nature of Tiger Cub
Investment managers display a bias to being short Convexity; a payoff profile where the
With the House poised to pass Democrats’ $1.9 trillion virus relief bill and Joe Biden
The Black Swan is a metaphor that describes an event that comes as a surprise,
Late last month, in “Superfluous People And The Arraignment Of Capitalism,” I cited economist Anne
In a world where some $18 trillion in debt “boasts” a negative yield, bonds no
Come this time every year, I tend to publish a list of “Investments” that I
Morgan Stanley’s Mike Wilson, who’s generally bullish on equities headed into 2021, says stocks may
On Monday, while documenting what I generically described as “a month to remember” (usually I
It’s fair to say 2020 has been a disastrous year for Exxon. The company, once
The “bottom line” among respondents to the October edition of BofA’s closely-watched Global Fund Manager
Donald Trump paid no federal income taxes in 10 of the past 15 years, and
China on Tuesday reported activity data for August that beat expectations, helping to cement the
There is perhaps no more vociferous debate in the always exciting world of macroeconomics than
Oh, how the mighty have fallen. In what can only be described as a sign
“Truth be told, I kind of like – I can’t believe I’m saying this – I actually think I’m bullish on stocks”.
… figuratively or literally.
An “increasingly unstable and uncertain” world.
Besides the US reopening story, the only narrative that’s likely to matter going forward is…
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