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| (Page 267 of 392) « Back | 265 | 266 | 267 | 268 | 269 | Next » |
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Pound-Dollar May Rebound if BoE Refuses to Cut Rates
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With upside inflation risks mounting, the Bank of England has already been prevented from cutting rates. Monday’s release of the UK producer price index may bring the inflation issue to the forefront once again
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What Did European Central Bank President Trichet Say?
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The European Central Bank and the Bank of England both left interest rates unchanged, which was right in line with the market's expectations.
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A Good Recipe for Bad Finance
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There’s a little more than a trillion dollars worth of subprime mortgages outstanding. We’ve heard that as many as one out of six of them is in trouble. And after you put these mortgages in CDOs and embed some options in the derivative contracts and get mathematicians to gin up models so you can leverage them to high heaven, there’s no telling how large the losses might go.
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US Inflation Could Prevent December Rate Cuts
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Fed fund futures are pricing in a 70 percent chance of yet another 25 basis point cut on December 11, but what about that pesky inflation issue? Won’t more accommodative monetary policy only fan price pressures?
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Bedazzling Chumps With Fancy Formulae
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In September, Wall Street’s biggest firms began to announce writedowns. It was obvious to even a freshman math student that you can’t compute real risk, and that markets have feedback mechanisms than tend to short circuit any kind of broadly followed modeling technique. Still, the deviants at Goldman and elsewhere saw no profit in intellectual honesty.
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What Does the Federal Reserve Think About the Dollar’s Weakness?
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Fed officials speaking today are not worried, and feel that the effect on inflation from the weak dollar is limited and that the US also needs a weaker currency to boost growth.
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Technical or Fundamental Analysis?
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Today Price Headley takes a look at how traders can combine technical analysis and fundamental analysis and have the best of both worlds.
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ECB to Leave Rates Steady, Trichet’s Bias may be More Hawkish
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Consumer and investor sentiment have turned more pessimistic, suggesting that the Euro-zone economy may be facing some road bumps. Furthermore, the financial markets have yet to fully recover, and as a result, the ECB is likely to take a firmer stance on inflation risks.
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Contractions Only Dollars Apart
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We are witness to something that doesn’t happen very often – like the eruption of a volcano or the collapse of a bridge – the first stage of a credit contraction. So far only at the top and the bottom of the credit structure are people getting pinched, squeezed and punished.
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Interview with Trader Richard Peterson
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Tim Bourquin interviews Richard Peterson, who talk about what to do to learn your own biases so you can overcome them on your road to consistent success in the markets.
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| (Page 267 of 392) « Back | 265 | 266 | 267 | 268 | 269 | Next » |