Debt Ceiling Theater, The 2023 Revival
Guest post by James Harrigan and Anthony Davies at the American Institute for Economic Research: It’s time again for Debt Ceiling Theater. Since 1940, Americans
Guest post by James Harrigan and Anthony Davies at the American Institute for Economic Research: It’s time again for Debt Ceiling Theater. Since 1940, Americans
Guest post by Charles Hugh Smith from his blog Oftwominds.org: One of the great fictions about money is that it is neutral. It isn’t. It’s
Guest post by John Hussman from Hussman Funds: One can go some distance in a mine field without anything blowing up – it’s just that
Guest post by Michael Pento from his blog on Pento Portfolio Strategies: Those investors who are hanging on to the hopes of an imminent Powell
Guest post from John Rubino on his substack: Gold miners come in lots of different shapes and sizes. But by universal agreement the best business
Guest post from Daniel Lacalle from the Mises Institute: In 2022, central banks will have purchased the largest amount of gold in recent history. According
Guest post by Dave Albin from the Mises Institute: The US federal government has a long history of intervening in voluntary human action, frequently tilting
Guest post from John Rubino from his Substack: At first glance, gold and silver seem pretty fungible. They’re both hypnotically pretty. Their prices tend to
Guest post by Charles Hugh Smith from Oftwominds.com: Rather than cheer the concept of a new currency, we’re better served to look at the velocity
Guest post from Adam Hamilton from Zeal LLC: Gold and its miners’ stocks both just flashed major Golden Cross buy signals. These powerfully-bullish indicators are
Guest post by Alasdair Macleod from Goldmoney.com: Probably the greatest error in modern economics was the abandonment of Say’s law, otherwise known as the law
Guest post by Simon Black from Sovereign Man: At precisely 8:13PM eastern time on the evening of October 28, 2003, a lonely 19-year old schoolboy
Guest post by Rudolph Kohn from the Mises Institute: Mises describes five characteristics that are vital to the function of money: marketability, durability, fungibility, trustworthiness, and convenience. The history of
Guest post by Charles Hugh Smith from his blog, Oftwominds.com: Should the wealth effect reverse as assets fall, capital gains evaporate and investment income declines,
Guest post by Wolf Richter from WolfStreet.com: Home prices in Canada dropped 1.2% in December from November, the ninth month-to-month decline in a row, and
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