Dystopia Revisited: ‘Central-Bankism’ And ‘The Next Normal’
It’s with varying degrees of success that I’ve endeavored to explain to casual readers what,
It’s with varying degrees of success that I’ve endeavored to explain to casual readers what,
Earlier this month, I revisited the risk parity discussion as it relates to the viability
“It’s unbelievable the twilight zone that we’re sort of living in, where people just say
It’s “fingers crossed” time. Fingers crossed that an egregious downside miss on ADP employment doesn’t
Somebody get Larry Kudlow on the line — we need to reiterate the “boom” narrative
The US is poised to fall behind as the world looks to recover from the
Maybe Jeff Gundlach was right.
“It ain’t over yet.” Yes it is.
Simply put: The economic, market, and societal cross currents are strong right now.
Where’s your damn free lunch?Â
…this isn’t coming from someone who is by nature a bullish individual.
Another incredulous “legend”, robbed of an opportunity to make (more) millions.
“…three-quarters of the way to the Tech Bubble high.”
Dollars, dictators, Debbie downers and determined Democrats.
“If you don’t [think] the Fed is buying stock ETFs on the next market shock, you are wrong.”
Critics will be critics, though.
“It is heartbreaking to see all that threatened right now.”
“…it doesn’t pay to rail that traders are getting it wrong if you don’t like how things go.”
“This could be a long, hard road we have ahead of us.”
“Today the range of negative outcomes seems much wider”…
“God willing and coronavirus willing”.
I’m guessing “Great Depression II” wouldn’t poll well.
“Wild” is an inadequate adjective.
Misses could exacerbate the bond rally. Beats may assuage fears.
What if he doesn’t even run?
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