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Wednesday, February 15th, 2012

Posts Tagged ‘ us treasury ’

TIP Bonds: A Contrarian Pick For Forward-Looking Investors

Nov 26th, 2008 | By Eric J Fry | Category: Featured

While the market panics about deflation, Eric Fry says forward-looking investors can profit by swimming against the tide. The Inflation-protected Treasury bond ETF (NYSE:TIP) has never been cheaper, meaning a great chance for gains as the government’s mega bailouts feed through to higher prices.



Inflationary Bailout To Send Gold Soaring In 2009

Nov 24th, 2008 | By Mike Caggeso | Category: Gold Market

Gold demand increased by 45% from the second quarter to the third. So why are gold prices falling? Mike Caggeso says frantic de-leveraging by hedge funds outweighed record retail demand for the precious metal. But he says the inflationary impact of the government’s bailout bonanza will be the catalyst for soaring gold prices in 2009.



Americans as Immigrant Workers in America

Nov 19th, 2008 | By Byron King | Category: Financial News

First Congress authorized $700 billion — quite a bit more than the entire Department of Defense budget — for some sort of “troubled asset relief plan (TARP).” (Nobody ever really explained it to my satisfaction. Somehow we were going to throw money at a very big problem and fix it.) Then the money flowed like rainwater to Wall Street and a bunch of banks. Then the banks and Wall Street houses continued to pay their insiders’ big salaries and bonuses.



Paulson’s TARP Revision Spooks The Market

Nov 12th, 2008 | By Andrew Snyder | Category: Financial News

The markets are deep in negative territory again today and investors are not too happy with Henry Paulson. Is he changing the rules in the middle of the game, or is he merely reacting because the game has changed?

Earlier today, the Secretary of the Treasury stood in front of an audience of Wall Street reporters and gave the country an update on the Trouble Asset Relief Program (TARP) and his team’s efforts to shore up the nation’s economy. What he had to say is taking some investors by surprise.

Most importantly, Paulson noted he would not use the TARP to buy the troubled assets of the nation’s financial institutions (like the name of the program implies). Instead, the Treasury Department will…



Stay Short Detroit As Big Three Buckle

Nov 10th, 2008 | By Adam Lass | Category: Featured

The ‘Big Three’ automakers in Detroit are begging for a government rescue. Adam Lass says these companies are just too risky to raise capital themselves. A bailout may be coming, but shareholders won’t be saved. That’s why Adam says investors should short GM (NYSE:GM) and Ford (NYSE:F).



Why Inflation Is Still The Main Long-Term Threat

Nov 10th, 2008 | By Dan Denning | Category: Financial News

Dan Denning takes issue with the idea that the Fed will be able to mop up the excess liquidity caused by its monetary expansion. Foreign savers are not going to keep funding US deficits forever. And that means the Fed must print more dollars to raise money. And that is super inflationary.



How To Play Treasury’s $2 Trillion Debt Binge

Nov 7th, 2008 | By Martin Hutchinson | Category: Featured

Martin Hutchinson says $2 trillion in Treasury borrowing this year is a conservative estimate. This new debt will push up private-sector borrowing rates, while rapid money supply growth will create inflation. Martin says the Rydex Inverse Bond Fund (RYJUX) is a good way to play the demise of long-term T-bonds.



This Is Not A New Economic Dawn

Nov 6th, 2008 | By Bill Bonner | Category: Politics & Economics

The election of Barack Obama does not change America’s fundamental economic flaws, says Bill Bonner. The slump caused by too much debt will continue. And a US dollar crash caused by reckless money printing is still just around the corner.



Bailout Plan Forcing U.S. to Borrow $1.4 Trillion, Creating a $1 Trillion Deficit

Nov 5th, 2008 | By William Patalon III | Category: Financial News

The U.S. Treasury Department plans to borrow a record $550 billion in the current quarter, and another $368 billion in the first three months of the New Year – money needed to fund the $700 billion bailout plan the government is using to battle the worst financial crisis since the Great Depression.

Wall Street bond traders estimate that the U.S. government will have to borrow a record $1.4 trillion during the current fiscal year – an unprecedented amount of debt that’s nevertheless needed to cover a federal budget deficit that’s expected to approach $1 trillion for the fiscal year, CNNMoney.com reported.

(The government’s fiscal year differs from the calendar year, and actually began Oct. 1. The $700 billion bailout plan was approved by the…



How To Win Your Share Of The $700 Billion Bailout

Nov 5th, 2008 | By Andrew Snyder | Category: Stock Market Investing

Andrew Snyder says savvy investors can earn some quick profits on the back of the government’s $700bn bailout plan. A company like General Electric (NYSE:GE) doesn’t need a cash injection to survive, but can use a “shot in the arm” to revitalise growth.