Home » Posts tagged 'central banks' (Page 14)

Tag Archives: central banks

Olduvai
Click on image to purchase

Content

Olduvai III: Catacylsm
Click on image to purchase

Post categories

Post Archives by Category

Three reasons why inflation is rising. Two of them aren’t going away

Three reasons why inflation is rising. Two of them aren’t going away A remarkable thing happened yesterday that tells you everything you need to know about inflation. In the morning, US Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen stated bluntly that “interest rates will have to rise somewhat to make sure that our economy doesn’t overheat. . .” […]

Continue Reading →

Dangers Of Programmable Money Explained 

Dangers Of Programmable Money Explained  Dominic Frisby with Money, Markets & Other Matters talks about the war on cash and central bank digital currency, known as CBDC. He questions if CBDCs are “the final step into the brave new world – Orwellian great reset dystopia – we seem to be heading towards” or are they “the onramp to the Bitcoin […]

Continue Reading →

Investors Do Not See “Transitory” Inflation

Investors Do Not See “Transitory” Inflation The Federal Reserve and European Central Bank repeat that the recent inflationary spike is “transitory”. The problem is that investors do not buy it. Inflation is always a monetary phenomenon, and this time is not different. What central banks call transitory effects, and the impact of supply chains are not the real drivers […]

Continue Reading →

Weekly Commentary: Peak Monetary Stimulus

Weekly Commentary: Peak Monetary Stimulus Not again. Bloomberg is referring to “the bond market riddle.” The Financial Times went with the headline, “US Government Bond Investors Left Bewildered by ‘Bonkers’ Market Move.” It’s been three weeks of declining Treasury yields in the face of robust economic data (and surging commodities prices!). Too soon to be […]

Continue Reading →

Rabo: We Are Edging Closer To A Biblical Commodity Price Increase Scenario

Rabo: We Are Edging Closer To A Biblical Commodity Price Increase Scenario We Need Some Serious Remodelling Yesterday’s Daily saw me float the model hypothesis that the Fed would like everyone to have all their money in stocks, so they would have a practical mechanism for inflating and deflating the economy above and beyond the […]

Continue Reading →

Producer Prices Surge. Germany, China, other Countries Are Now Exporting Inflation, Adding to US Inflation Pressures

Producer Prices Surge. Germany, China, other Countries Are Now Exporting Inflation, Adding to US Inflation Pressures Central banks still brush it off as just “temporary.” Producer prices of German industrial products in March rose by 0.9% from February, after having risen by 0.7% in February from January, and after having spiked by 1.4% in January […]

Continue Reading →

A dangerous misunderstanding

A dangerous misunderstanding How much money should there be in the world?  It is an interesting question; to which, at any time, there is a correct answer that is unknown to anyone.  It is the amount at which money is able to perfectly perform its two key functions – being a medium of exchange and a store of value.  […]

Continue Reading →

It’s time to start thinking about inflation

It’s time to start thinking about inflation In the year 215 AD, the young Roman Emperor Caracalla, then just 27 years of age, decided to ‘fix’ Rome’s perennial inflation problem by minting a brand new coin. Caracalla’s predecessors over the previous several decades had ordered an astonishing debasement of Roman currency; the silver content in […]

Continue Reading →

The coming oil shortage – Part I

The coming oil shortage – Part I The oil price crash on the back of the COVID-19 lockdowns has accelerated the coming supply crunch. Both national and international oil companies have slashed CAPEX and maintenance spending, which will push up decline rates and US shale drillers finally focus on profitability instead of growth. Current longer-dated […]

Continue Reading →

Inflation, real interest rates revisited

Inflation, real interest rates revisited Gold prices ticked higher on Tuesday after inflation data showed US consumer prices rose in March for the fourth straight month and inflation hit its highest level in 2.5 years. Gold for June delivery climbed $8.50, or half a percent, to $1,741.20 an ounce, and spot gold at time of […]

Continue Reading →

Is China Preparing A Gold-Backed Yuan: Beijing Greenlights Purchases Of Billions In Bullion

Is China Preparing A Gold-Backed Yuan: Beijing Greenlights Purchases Of Billions In Bullion In 2018, the Chinese launched a gold-backed, yuan-denominated oil futures contract.  These contracts were priced in yuan, but convertible to gold, raising the prospect that “the rise of the petroyuan could be the death blow for the dollar.” Two weeks ago, The IMF reported that […]

Continue Reading →

War on Cash: The Next Phase

War on Cash: The Next Phase With so much news about an economic reopening, a border crisis, massive government spending and exploding deficits, it’s easy to overlook the ongoing war on cash. That’s a mistake because it has serious implications not only for your money, but for your privacy and personal freedom, as you’ll see […]

Continue Reading →

The Mainstream Is Wrong About Rising Bond Yields and Gold

The Mainstream Is Wrong About Rising Bond Yields and Gold Prices are going up. The Federal Reserve is printing money at an unprecedented rate. The US government continues to borrow and spend at a torrid pace. As Peter Schiff put it in a recent podcast, we’re adrift in a sea of inflation. Gold is supposed to be an […]

Continue Reading →

When Central Bankers Take Credit for “Solving” Crises They Created

When Central Bankers Take Credit for “Solving” Crises They Created File under: “It is impossible to get a man to understand something when his livelihood depends on his not understanding it.” This morning  I came across a Bob Murphy tweet replying to Mark Carney, the Canadian central banker and Davos darling: It turned out the […]

Continue Reading →

US Dollar’s Status as Dominant “Global Reserve Currency” Drops to 25-Year Low

US Dollar’s Status as Dominant “Global Reserve Currency” Drops to 25-Year Low Central banks getting nervous about the Fed’s drunken Money Printing and the US Government’s gigantic debt? But still leery of the Chinese renminbi. The global share of US-dollar-denominated exchange reserves dropped to 59.0% in the fourth quarter, according to the IMF’s COFER data […]

Continue Reading →

Olduvai IV: Courage
Click on image to read excerpts

Olduvai II: Exodus
Click on image to purchase

Click on image to purchase @ FriesenPress