Is Secular Inflation an Invisible Stock Market Crash?
Secular inflationary bear markets are the worst ones due to the extended periods of poor performance in real terms. The 60/40 portfolio performed worse in 1965-1982 than during 1929-1942 and...
Secular inflationary bear markets are the worst ones due to the extended periods of poor performance in real terms. The 60/40 portfolio performed worse in 1965-1982 than during 1929-1942 and...
Gold (XAU/USD) continued to rise after a minor correction last week, and the pair may now increase toward historical highs. The price has approached the resistance level at $2,760. Two factors...
Kamala Harris boosted by The Magnificent 7, global gold reserves surpass the euro as central banks' second most held asset, and de-euroisation vs. de-dollarisation. The United States’ tech giants...
Republican Everett Dirksen was the Senate Minority Leader during the 1960s. Cautioning that federal spending had a way of getting out of control, Dirksen reportedly observed, "A billion here, a...
With only one week remaining before the U.S. presidential election, there’s a growing sense of uncertainty in the air. Investors are wondering how to position their money, bracing for the possibility...
Everyone expects more Fed rate cuts in the coming months, but the outcome of the US presidential election could influence their speed and depth. Of course, this is not the only conundrum policymakers...
The last full week ahead of the US election is jam-packed with key economic reports. As a result, the potential for surprises that could sway voters is in high gear in the days to come. Here’s a...
Oil and gold slide as Israel shows restraint in retaliatory strike on Iran Yen under pressure after LDP party loses majority in snap election Trump poll boost keeps dollar firm as crucial US data...
Gold Holds Steady as the US Dollar Strengthens Gold (XAU/USD) traded sideways last week, fluctuating between $2,720 and $2,750. Robust US economic data strengthened the US dollar (USD) and Treasury...
Fed officials indicated that the September 18 rate cut was likely to be followed by more cuts. They deemed that 5.25%-5.50% was too restrictive, which is why they cut it by 50bps to...