Prudentbear.com
Quotable
"We have another economic problem which is mixed up in this of too much
consumption, too much spending relative to our capacity to invest and to
export.
It’s involved with the financial crisis but in a way it’s more difficult than the
financial crisis because it reflects the basic structure of the economy.”
Paul Volcker, December 11, 2009
Top News
More News
China’s GDP Growth Accelerates to Fastest Since 2007
- Bloomberg
- 01/21/2010 04:05 AM
Obama to Propose New Rules on Banks’ Size, Proprietary Trading
- Bloomberg
- 01/21/2010 04:04 AM
Obama, Democrats Signal Readiness to Limit Health Law
- Bloomberg
- 01/20/2010 07:13 PM
Market Movers
Archive
- CNBC
- 01/20/2010 07:19 PM
U.S. stock futures seesaw as earnings roll in
- Market Watch from Dow Jones
- 01/21/2010 07:24 AM
Emerging Stocks Fall, Erasing 2010 Gains, Led by Financials
- Bloomberg
- 01/21/2010 05:02 AM
Greek 10-Year Yield Premium to Bunds Is Widest Since Euro Debut
- Bloomberg
- 01/21/2010 04:06 AM
China growth worries weigh on emerging stocks
- Reuters
- 01/21/2010 04:07 AM
Oil slips toward $77 on China growth worries
- Reuters
- 01/21/2010 05:08 AM
Gold Declines to Two-Week Low as Stronger Dollar Curbs Demand
- Bloomberg
- 01/21/2010 05:00 AM
Commentary
Credit Bubble Bulletin
by Doug Noland | Jan 15
Current Account Deficits: 25 Years and Counting
Do current account deficits matter? A 25 year debate... and counting.
Read moreThe Bear's Lair
by Martin Hutchinson | Jan 18
The futility of Wall Street "reform"
The new liabilities tax on banks announced by President Obama last week will probably raise the revenue he wants.
Read moreFeatured Commentary
by Satyajit Das | Jan 19
In 1971, Ralph Lapp, a nuclear physicist, used the term "China syndrome" to describe a hypothetical nuclear reactor meltdown where the molten core breaches containment barriers and melts through the crust of the Earth reaching China.
Read moreGuest Commentary
by Michael Pento | Jan 20
The shape of this economic recovery will not be in a "V," as many pundits have promulgated, but instead may be the inversion of that letter …
Read more