The Chinese economy has been taking a beating on exports, imports and its monetary status around the world.
Stocks sold off last week, but the sell-off had nothing to do with the presidential election – and everything to do with the establishment.
It was a tough month for 5+ unit (multifamily) housing starts in September.
(Kitco News) – Asian stock markets were mixed overnight, despite some mostly upbeat economic data coming out of China. European stock markets were mostly lower.
Fracking has perverted many organs of the government in North Dakota into petro-cronies.
Volatility is waiting to explode due to unstable currency exchange rates, bank liquidity crises, geopolitical uncertainty, and a wild U.S. election cycle.
Some economists spin a story that the public debt can be expanded rapidly to facilitate GDP growth.
While there’s near unanimous agreement on half the Paris climate deal, the other half is contentious.
Will subprime credit card loans fuel the next Great Recession?
We’ve been warning for months about the impact China’s ballooning debt could have on global markets.