Doug Noland | TalkMarkets | Page 7
Professional Bear
Contributor's Links: Credit Bubble Bulletin
I just wrapped up 25 years (persevering) as a “professional bear”. My lucky break came in late-1989, when I was hired by Gordon Ringoen to be the trader for his short-biased hedge fund in San Francisco. Working as a short-side trader, analyst and portfolio manager during the great ...more

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Market Commentary: The Modern-Day Bank Run
The coronavirus outbreak will eventually pass, though I doubt contemporary finance will pass this test. Suggesting history’s greatest Bubble - that is today in serious jeopardy – is considered crazy talk. Yet this is the reality.
Weekly Commentary: Hair Of The Dog
U.S. stocks were at record lows last week. What happened?
Weekly Commentary: Pandemic Risk Rising
Coronavirus cases in China surpassed 76,000. Deaths have reached 2,345 and there are reported cases of re-infections after hospital discharge. Cases are spreading around the world as well as pandemic fears are rising.
Weekly Commentary: One Extraordinary Year
Staring at a rapidly unfolding economic and financial crisis, Beijing has made the decision to move forward with efforts to get their faltering economy up and running. This comes with significant risk.
Weekly Commentary: Dr. Li Wenliang
Summer market developments were more about China and global monetary policy than economic prospects. I believe vulnerable Chinese financial and economic Bubbles are the predominant factor behind the irrepressible demand for global sovereign debt.
Weekly Commentary: The First Major Pandemic Scare
Bloomberg states that the Coronavirus could drag China GDP to 4.5%. Other estimates have growth slowing to 5.0%. Yet a full-fledged economic contraction seems a high probability.
Coronavirus And The End Of Boom And Bust
China is the marginal source of both global Credit and demand for commodities (and much else). Any development posing risk to China’s vulnerable Bubble rather quickly becomes a pressing global issue ad the coronavirus has taken center stage.
Weekly Commentary: "This Is Insane"
We’re witness to historic developments across global financial markets extending far beyond an equities melt-up.
Weekly Commentary: Issues 2020
Markets know that policymakers know the system is acutely fragile. Central bankers are not only trapped, the situation is so dire that they have no choice but to move early and aggressively to ensure Bubbles can’t begin deflating.
Weekly Commentary: 2019 In Review
It cannot be overstated: Bubbles are of paramount importance – for markets, finance more generally, economies, and social and geopolitical stability.
Weekly Commentary: Just The Facts - Dec. 27, 2019
My weekly roundup covering absolutely everything you need to know from the past week.
Q3 2019 Z.1 Flow Of Funds: Repo Madness
Q3 was yet another fascinating quarter for U.S. finance and our federal government continues to command the debt bullet train, expanding borrowings at a 10.4% pace during the quarter.
Weekly Commentary: Crazy Extremis
Was the Great Depression chiefly the consequence of post-crash policy mistakes, as conventional thinking has come profess?
Weekly Commentary: Just The Facts
The federal debt has increased by $1,303,466.578.471.45 since last Thanksgiving,.. the largest debt increase in nine years. Meanwhile China and the US are close to a trade deal. Plus could privatizing Fannie and Freddie jeopardize the US economy?
Weekly Commentary: China Update
October is typically a sluggish period for lending in China. But at $88 billion, the growth in Aggregate Financing was about a third below estimates.
Weekly Commentary: Music To The Market
If markets maintain high confidence in one specific outcome, it would be that the trend of global disinflationary pressures continues (and likely worsens).
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