Speculation Mounts Over RBA October Meeting As the RBA heads towards it October meeting, there are a number of important issues on the agenda. The price of iron ore which was one of the major topics of the September meeting have now seen a 26% resurgence in price and the world’s fourth biggest exporter of iron ore, Fortescu Metals, has announced that its US$4.5-billion debt deal will now enable it to refinance any outstanding deals. The central banks in Europe and the United States have announced their intentions to fight off inflation and stimulate asset prices by printing unlimited money while China will be contributing a $150-billion package to the mix. Unemployment Despite … [Read more...]
Are Businesses Quietly Preparing for a Financial Apocalypse?
By Dan Steinhart, Casey Research US corporations are sitting on more cash than at any point since World War 2. That's without including banks. I'm only talking about non-financial corporations – the ones that sell goods and services and make the economy go. Those businesses hold $1.4 trillion. In absolute terms, that's the most ever. In relative terms, it's the most since World War II. As investors, we can infer quite a bit from corporations' inability (or unwillingness) to deploy their cash. For one, it indicates that business have assumed a very defensive stance. Cash, of course, is a buffer against uncertainty - the uncertainty that business slows for any reason. … [Read more...]
What is the Difference Between Micro and Macro Economics?
Microeconomics vs. Macroeconomics- Economics can be described as the social science that examines how people use limited resources to produce, distribute, and consume goods and services to satisfy their unlimited needs and desires. Although microeconomics and macroeconomics are not the only disciplines and paths of specialization to exist within the broader context of economics, these two related, tightly bound, but nonetheless disparate fields are likely the most prominent. Microeconomics and macroeconomics do exactly what their names indicate. Microeconomics focuses on close-up snapshots of people, businesses, and non-profit organizations acting within economies while macroeconomics … [Read more...]
Aussie Costs of Spending, Living and Credit
Aussie Credit Card Reforms The recent credit card reforms, enforced starting July 1, have stirred up quite the debate on the matter, with analysts and experts rushing to argue whether or not the reforms are actually beneficial for the end-user. However, the habits, debts and expenditure afforded by that very end-user are causing an extended discussion of their own. Where does the truth lie? Is Australia really sinking under credit card debt? Are the new reforms going to spell a slow, yet certain and agonizing death for plastic? Or is the state of the nation’s money far more positive than we imagine—and simply suffering at the hands of global recession-induced cries of panic? … [Read more...]
Recruiters Cost Cutting Strategies
Australian Job Market According to a recent report published by News.com.au, the Australian job market, albeit relatively secure for the time being, does have its sore spots. There are numerous types of employment, which, due to the altering economic landscape and shifts caused by the global recession, globalization and the spread of outsourcing and offshoring, are simply not safe anymore. Read on to learn what those unsafe job sectors are, to figure out what recruiters are looking for, in these trying times and to find out about possible strategies employed by companies which are recruiting on a tight budget. Travel. Travel has come to be regarded as a luxury, during a time when the … [Read more...]
Will Bernanke Save the Equity Markets?
Equity Markets get no stimulus How far is the Fed from reaching the bottom of its ammunition box? Well, both Mario Draghi and Ben Bernanke said no to yet more monetary stimulus last week. Wall Street unsurprisingly was disappointed. Wall Street expected more stimulus, as institutional investors are analyzing monetary policy from their own perspective rather than the central bank's viewpoint – understandable, but a big mistake. Wall Street's Conundrum: with the S&P 500 up less than 7% in 2012, the year is almost over, and the investment firms have little to show for it. This 7% return might be OK in calmer markets, but instead investors have been taken on a rollercoaster … [Read more...]
The US Economy Puzzle- Is the U.S. Really Capitalist?
Is the United States really a "free market" economy and the bastion of "capitalism" as we claim? Or is it a Bureaucratic mess? Is it a "command economy"? Obviously we haven't reached the depths of socialism or communism that China and Russia reached before their fall and reemergence as capitalists but none-the-less our economy is not as free as it once was. There is burdensome regulations that prevent competition, political cronyism, corruption, and as David Galland contends in the following article "Europe and the economy of the United States is – and has been for decades – increasingly under the control of central planners at the expense of the free market." ~ Tim McMahon, editor The … [Read more...]
How to Save Your Money And Your Life
Editor's Note: There is only one real way to create wealth and that is to build something. If you take $50,000 worth of lumber, metal and glass and combine it with $50,000 worth of skilled labor you can come up with a $150,000 house. You have in effect created $50,000 out of thin air. Or by machining a $2.00 lump of metal you can create a $20.00 gear or a $200 watch. It all depends on the skillful application of technology to raw materials. Everything else is just rearranging deck chairs on the Titanic. In the short term, rearranging deck chairs can be very profitable for an individual but it doesn't "create wealth" it simply transfers it from one person to another. The rapid pace of … [Read more...]
What is the Fiscal Cliff and How is it Affecting the Economy
The fiscal cliff that is the current hot topic in the news is a combination of automatic spending cuts and tax hikes that are scheduled to go into effect at the end of 2012 and the beginning of 2013. The spending cuts were triggered when congress failed to reach a deficit reduction agreement during last years debt ceiling debate. The tax increases are also automatic because Congress failed to make the "Bush Tax Cuts" permanent opting instead for a more politically expedient temporary tax reduction. In other words, they "kicked the can down the road" and it landed at the end of 2012. Perhaps they were hoping the Mayans were right and the world would end before they had to deal with the … [Read more...]
Stocks Typically Fall Faster Than They Rise
Online stock market investing is a risky prospect these days. For a limited time you can download a free copy of the May issue of Elliott Wave Financial Forecast to help you decide how you should proceed for the rest of 2012 and beyond ~editor The Smell of Fear: Detecting the Dow's Scent Stocks typically fall faster than they rise Rising stock prices vs. investor fear: When one is present, the other is usually absent. Yet the two were actually in each other's company around the time of the most recent high in the Dow Industrials (May 1): This week the Dow carried to a new recovery high without generating a corresponding new low in the VIX. This suggests a sudden hesitancy compared … [Read more...]