Free Republic 2nd Qtr 2024 Fundraising Target: $81,000 Receipts & Pledges to-date: $21,133
26%  
Woo hoo!! And we're now over 26%!! Thank you all very much!! God bless.

Keyword: globalcrisis

Brevity: Headers | « Text »
  • IMF says global debt tops $152 trillion, urges some to spend more

    10/06/2016 7:22:45 PM PDT · by Lorianne · 6 replies
    Reuters ^ | 05 October 2016 | David Lawder
    The world is swimming in a record $152 trillion in debt, the IMF said on Wednesday, even as the institution encourages some countries to spend more to boost flagging growth if they can afford it. Global debt, both public and private, reached 225 percent of global economic output last year, up from about 200 percent in 2002, the IMF said in its new Fiscal Monitor report. The IMF said about two thirds of the 2015 total, or about $100 billion, is owed by private sector borrowers, and noted that rapid increases in private debt often lead to financial crises. While...
  • HEDGE FUND LEGEND JULIAN ROBERTSON: Everything is in a bubble and it will end in 'chaos'

    09/29/2016 4:06:55 AM PDT · by expat_panama · 30 replies
    Business Insider ^ | September 28, 2016 | Bob Bryan
    Julian Robertson, the legendary hedge fund manager behind Tiger Management, thinks central banks are fueling bubbles throughout financial markets. "We don't have negative rates here in the States yet, but I think it's tragic that we've taken rates down this far," Robertson said this week at Bloomberg's Surveillance Primetime event. "I know the Federal Reserves all over the world are trying to ensure prosperity, but in doing so I think they are ensuring a huge bubble, which will be pricked, and we will all be hurt by it." Negative and near-zero interest rates from central banks have allowed increased borrowing......
  • UN fears third leg of the global financial crisis - with prospect of epic debt defaults

    09/22/2016 3:57:08 AM PDT · by expat_panama · 2 replies
    U.K. Telegraph ^ | 22 SEPTEMBER 2016 • 7:22AM | AMBROSE EVANS-PRITCHARD
    The third leg of the world's intractable depression is yet to come. If trade economists at the United Nations are right, the next traumatic episode may entail the greatest debt jubilee in history. It may also prove to be the definitive crisis of globalized capitalism, the demise of the liberal free-market orthodoxies promoted for almost forty years by the Bretton Woods institutions, the OECD, and the Davos fraternity. "Alarm bells have been ringing... ...money was wasted, skewed towards "highly cyclical and rent-based sectors of limited strategic importance for catching up," it said. Worse yet, these countries have imported the deformities...
  • UN fears third leg of the global financial crisis, with epic debt defaults

    09/21/2016 2:21:38 PM PDT · by NRx · 35 replies
    The Telegraph ^ | 09-21-2016 | Ambrose E. Pritchard
    The third leg of the world's intractable depression is yet to come. If trade economists at the United Nations are right, the next traumatic episode may entail the greatest debt jubilee in history. It may also prove to be the definitive crisis of globalized capitalism, the demise of the liberal free-market orthodoxies promoted for almost forty years by the Bretton Woods institutions, the OECD, and the Davos fraternity. "Alarm bells have been ringing over the explosion of corporate debt levels in emerging economies, which now exceed $25 trillion. Damaging deflationary spirals cannot be ruled out," said the annual report of...
  • "Tremendous Ripple Effects" - Retailers Demand Bailout After Hanjin Collapse Paralyzes Trade

    09/05/2016 2:00:06 PM PDT · by Lorianne · 30 replies
    Zero Hedge ^ | 02 September 2016 | Tyler Durden
    When we first reported about the imminent paralysis of an unknown number of global supply chains and a potential shock in worldwide trade as a result of the historic bankruptcy of Hanjing Shipping, one of the world's largest container shipping companies which handles 8% of Trans-Pacific trade volume for the US market, we concluded that "the global implications from the bankruptcy are unknown: if, as expected, the company's ships remain "frozen" and inaccessible for weeks if not months, the impact on global supply chains will be devastating, potentially resulting in a cascading waterfall effect, whose impact on global economies could...
  • Even Monetary Authorities Think We're In a Depression

    09/09/2016 3:55:45 AM PDT · by expat_panama · 33 replies
    Real Clear Markets ^ | September 9, 2016 | Jeffrey Snider
    You probably aren't aware because it isn't a topic that gets discussed much if at all on the outside, but increasingly even monetary policymakers are coming around to the idea that we are in a depression. What choice do they have, really, since practically any chart of any economic account in any economy shows as much. The gathering in Jackson Hole late last month was really an internal discussion in how to think about keeping current central bank frameworks alive in such a world. Earlier this week, San Francisco Fed President (and CEO) John C. Williams spoke in Nevada on...
  • ECB's Mario Draghi has run out of magic as deflation closes in

    09/09/2016 12:01:33 PM PDT · by Lorianne · 15 replies
    Telegraph (UK) ^ | 09 September 2016 | Ambrose Evans-Pritchard
    Large parts of the eurozone are slipping deeper into a deflationary trap despite negative interest rates and one trillion euros of quantitative easing by the European Central Bank, leaving the currency bloc with no safety buffer when the next global recession hits. The ECB is close to exhausting its ammunition and appears increasingly powerless to do more under the legal constraints of its mandate. It has downgraded its growth forecast for the next two years, citing the uncertainties of Brexit, and admitted that it has little chance of meeting its 2pc inflation target this decade, insisting that it is now...
  • Hyperinflation Versus Deflationary Collapse

    09/08/2016 6:35:13 AM PDT · by blam · 16 replies
    TMO ^ | 9-8-2016 | Darryl_R_Schoon
    Darryl R Schoon August 8, 2016 If the thunder don’t get you, then the lightning will… The Grateful Dead, The Wheel(lyrics) In the world of phenomena, everything has a beginning and an end; and today, the bankers’ endgame is moving closer to its inevitable resolution and demise. The question is no longer if, it is when and how. The relationship between paper money and gold is causal in central banking’s collapse. When paper money was backed by gold, it (1) gave the bankers’ paper money its value and (2) constrained the ability of governments to print limitless amounts of money,...
  • Global Supply Chains Paralyzed After World's 7th Largest Container Shipper Files Bankruptcy

    09/01/2016 6:23:59 AM PDT · by Enlightened1 · 28 replies
    Zero Hedge ^ | 08/31/16 | Tyler Durden
    South Korea's biggest shipping firm, announced the filing for receivership and a request to the court to freeze its assets, which the Seoul Central District Court planned to grant, a judge told Reuters. As part of the company's insolvency process, the court will now decide whether Hanjin Shipping should remain as a going concern or be dissolved, a process that usually takes one or two months but is expected to be accelerated in Hanjin's case, the judge said. A bankruptcy for Hanjin Shipping would be the largest ever for a container shipper in terms of capacity, according to consultancy Alphaliner,...
  • Banks are preparing for an ‘economic nuclear winter’

    08/30/2016 7:47:57 AM PDT · by Lorianne · 59 replies
    CNBC ^ | 29 August 2016 | Spriha Srivastava
    The first half of 2016 has been a roller-coaster for financial markets. A combination of uncertainties surrounding the U.K.'s vote to leave the European Union and weaker-than-expected corporate earnings results across the region means a tough second half looms. European banks, in particular, have had a very tough six months as the shock and volatility around Brexit sent banking stocks south. Major European banks like Deutsche Bank and Credit Suisse saw their shares in free-fall after the referendum's results were announced. In the U.K., RBS was the worst-hit, with its shares plunging by more than 30 percent since June 24....
  • Citigroup warns a Donald Trump victory will cause global recession

    08/28/2016 2:45:09 PM PDT · by Lorianne · 93 replies
    Economic Collapse News ^ | 26 August 2016 | Andrew Moran
    If Republican nominee and real estate billionaire mogul Donald Trump pulls out an impossible victory against Hillary Clinton in November then prepare yourself for a global recession. This is the latest warning from Citigroup. The financial institution believes that markets would enter into chaos and the global economy would collapse because of policy uncertainty. Here is what Citi Chief Economist Willem Buiter opines (courtesy of Bloomberg): “A Trump victory in particular could prolong and perhaps exacerbate policy uncertainty and deliver a shock (though perhaps short-lived) to financial markets. Tightening financial conditions and further rises in uncertainty could trigger a significant...
  • Global Deflation Alert: World Trade Growth Has Ground To A Halt

    08/02/2016 12:22:43 PM PDT · by Lorianne · 20 replies
    Contra Corner ^ | 28 July 2016 | Johannes Fritz and Simon J Evenett
    Falling rates of global trade growth have attracted much comment by analysts and officials, giving rise to a literature on the ‘global trade slowdown’ (Hoekman 2015, Constantinescu et al. 2016). The term ‘slowdown’ gives the impression of world trade losing momentum, but growing nonetheless. The sense of the global pie getting larger has the soothing implication that one nation’s export gains don’t come at the expense of another’s. But are we right to be so sanguine? World trade volume plateaued around January 2015 Using what is widely regarded as the best available data on global trade dynamics, namely, theWorld Trade...
  • Why record low interest rates are a cause for alarm, not celebration

    06/13/2016 1:39:26 PM PDT · by Lorianne · 4 replies
    Telegraph (UK) ^ | 11 June 201 | Jeremy Warner
    UK rates may be at an all time low, but they are even lower elsewhere, particularly on the Continent, where the European Central Bank has been so busy buying up government debt that in Germany and Holland the stock of available bonds has been almost completely exhausted. There is virtually no yield left at all on 10 year German bunds, against which their UK equivalent look positively bountiful. So utterly desperate has this hunger for yield become that there are now an astonishing $10 trillion of government bonds worldwide trading on a negative interest rate. Some corporate borrowers too have...
  • How negative interest rates are undermining the economy

    06/13/2016 1:33:50 PM PDT · by Lorianne · 9 replies
    Money Week ^ | 10 June 2016 | John Stepek
    was talking about the bond bubble earlier this week. Seems I’m not the only one who’s a bit worried. Bill Gross, founder of Pimco (now at Janus Capital), tweeted “Global yields lowest in 500 years of recorded history… This is a supernova that will explode one day.” Aside from making the pedantic point that a supernova is itself an explosion (according to my limited knowledge of astronomy at least), I find little to disagree with here. The big question is – when will the bubble burst? We discussed that on Monday. But in the meantime, it’s worth asking – what...
  • Paying governments $10.4 trillion to take your money is now a political fiasco

    06/10/2016 9:29:38 AM PDT · by Lorianne · 8 replies
    Yahoo Finance ^ | 08 June 2016 | Jared Blikre
    The central bank experiment with negative interest rates—where governments charge you to buy their debt—is reaching a tipping point. Fierce political backlash is emerging against a policy that hurts savers and small businesses, all of which could have ramifications for U.S. markets. The bulk of negative-yielding debt is concentrated in Japan and Europe. Globally, the total is now $10.4 trillion, according to Fitch Ratings. In Japan, where politicians are preparing for the next election cycle, negative rates have become a hotbed issue. The chief policy architect of Japan’s new Democratic Party, Shiori Yamao, just came out publicly against the Bank...
  • Caterpillar Retail Sales Fall For Record 41 Consecutive Months

    05/20/2016 6:44:50 PM PDT · by Lorianne · 18 replies
    Zero Hedge ^ | 19 May 2016 | Tyler Durden
    For Caterpillar, the great recession was bad, for about 19 months. In May 2010, after declining sharply for just under two years, CAT posted it first positive global retail sales comps and never looked back... until December 2012 when comp sales once again turned negative and have been negative ever since. For the past 41 months! The breakdown showed that contrary to popular opinion, there has been no pick up in demand for heavy industrial machinery anywhere around the globe.
  • Burning Down the House in 2016

    02/22/2016 7:08:24 AM PST · by Travis McGee · 86 replies
    Western Rifle Shooters Association ^ | February 22, 2016 | Matthew Bracken
    Hold tight, wait 'til the party's over. Hold tight, we're in for nasty weather. There has got to be a way Burning down the house. By now, it should be obvious to the observant that the 'scoundrels-looting-the-treasury' phase of our economic arc is about played out, and before the entire rotten financial edifice collapses, there will be a war ignited across Europe and the Middle East which will serve as a distraction for the masses, while the very worst of the scoundrels take to ground to wait for the smoke to clear before they emerge. The gangsters actually directing the...
  • 'Miracle' needed to save the world, because central banks can't

    05/11/2016 6:03:21 AM PDT · by Lorianne · 12 replies
    Source material cannot be posted to FR | 11 May 2016 | Vesna Poljak
    see link below
  • Has the BRICs bubble burst?

    03/28/2016 7:04:35 AM PDT · by Lorianne · 7 replies
    Guardian UK ^ | 27 March 2016 | Simon Tisdall
    Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa seem to be failing to justify predictions of 21st century domination ___ The political crisis in Brazil over economic mismanagement and high-level corruption, likely to come to a head next week, has reinforced the fashionable view, popular among western governments and businesses, that the Brics bubble has burst. Members of the exclusive Brics club of leading developing countries – Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa – are failing to justify predictions that, separately and together, they will dominate the 21st century world, or so the argument goes. The Brics concept, plus acronym,...
  • World is 'overloaded on monetary policy', says OECD

    03/20/2016 2:34:18 PM PDT · by Lorianne · 4 replies
    Telegraph (UK) ^ | 19 March 2016 | Szu Ping Chan
    Central banks cannot haul economies out of stagnation on their own, the OECD has warned. Catherine Mann, chief economist at the Paris-based think-tank, said countries were now “overloaded on monetary policy” as she described the use of negative interest rates as “a reaction of central banks trying to meet the objective of raising inflation and fostering growth alone”. Ms Mann said banks faced being “squeezed” by the unintended consequences of sub-zero rates in an environment where demand remained subdued. The OECD has repeatedly warned that fiscal policy and structural reforms are needed to ensure recoveries are self-sustaining. “In the economies...