Showing posts with label Bill Bonner. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Bill Bonner. Show all posts

Friday, February 15, 2008

The Devilish Mixture of Stagflation

By Bill Bonner

"One part slump…one part inflation…and one part who-knows-what. Of course, the feds are eager to put more inflation into the brew. If they had their druthers, the concoction would have more of a kick - with more exciting price increases and less depressing slump."

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Thursday, February 14, 2008

The Fed's Open Checkbook Policy

By Bill Bonner

"Faced with what appeared to be a '70s style slump, Bernanke rushed off in the opposite direction - offering lower interest rates and more cash. He hopes to avoid a recession and - who knows - this morning's news suggests that he may have done the trick."


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Tuesday, February 5, 2008

Financial Setbacks

By Bill Bonner

"There is no magic to Free Enterprise. It is the best way to create wealth, but it does not prevent people from making mistakes. Capitalism offers people a chance to make money. But it also offers them a chance to make fools of themselves."

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Monday, February 4, 2008

Capitalism and the American Way

By Bill Bonner,

"Capitalism we define as merely a state of nature…where people are free to go about their business based on customary, consensual rules in an evolved, vernacular market system. The more you tamper with it, the less well it works."

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Tuesday, January 29, 2008

Zimbabwe Economics



Bill Clinton should have gone to the Alps. Instead, the poor man went to the piedmont...to the aid of his wife in South Carolina.

At the annual Davos, Switzerland, conference of celebs, power-brokers, and do-gooders, Clinton was always a hit. In Carolina, he was a flop.

If he’d been in Davos, he might have given the meeting some of the magic of the old days. Every year, the movers and shakers gather to tell each other how to make a better world. Most just blather in a way that began naïvely, early in their careers, soured into cynicism in middle age, and finally becomes merely stupid. Some probably still think they can improve things. A few probably succeed.

But this year’s meeting seems to have had a defeatist tone to it. Probably because the news was bad.

Last Sunday, it was discovered that a young man at an old bank had managed to get himself into $50 billion worth of positions – most of them losing positions. This was more than half of the value of all of France’s gold and currency reserves. It was more than the entire value that had been built up by the bank over decades. How could it happen? What was wrong? How could banks be so fragile...and what could you think of the whole world’s financial system when it was built with bricks that cracked up so readily?