Doug Noland | TalkMarkets | Page 5
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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Weekly Commentary: The Great 2021 Squeeze Mania
Yet another week for the history books. For posterity: GameStop gained 400%, AMC Entertainment 278%, Express 235%, Siebert Financial 122%, Cel-Sci 75%, Novavax 74%, Vaxart 68%, Fulgent Genetics 60%, Vir Biotech 59%, National Bev 54%, and Fossil 47%.
Weekly Commentary: 2020 Year In Review
In the middle of a devastating pandemic, financial conditions loosened dramatically throughout the emerging markets. Equities and bond markets rallied spectacularly. It was truly a year for the history books.
Weekly Commentary: $10.275 TN In Nine Months
Federal Reserve Assets surged $120 billion last week to a record $7.363 TN. Fed Assets inflated $3.593 TN, or 95%, over the past 66 weeks. M2 “money” supply surged $228 billion in this week’s report to a record $19.226 TN.
Weekly Commentary: Pondering The New Treasury Secretary
Janet Yellen as the new Secretary of the Treasury is being universally well-received by the markets. But in my commitment to accurately chronicle history there’s an aspect of Yellen’s career that should not be overlooked: Her failure as Fed chair.
Weekly Commentary: Critical Juncture
We’ve grown accustomed to the “new normal”: Stock market ebullience even as the country suffers through a distressing confluence of hardships. The S&P 500 surged 7.3% this week, the strongest weekly advance since April.
Weekly Commentary: The New Massive
The system has commenced a grand experiment in New Massive deficit spending. This follows years of very large (formerly known as “massive”) deficits.
Weekly Commentary: Covid Uncertainties
It significantly raises the stakes for a potential nightmare scenario: with less than five weeks until election day, the President contracts COVID-19.
Weekly Commentary: Extraordinary Q2 2020 Z.1 Flow Of Funds
The Fed’s own data illuminate the historic Monetary Disorder that today runs wild. In short, finance has completely run amok, with the data corroborating the super cycle “end game” thesis.
Revisiting "Coin In The Fuse Box"
Powell is struggling to reinforce flagging Federal Reserve credibility. Trichet was focused on establishing credibility for the unproven European Central Bank.
State-Directed Credit Splurge
With 2020 GDP estimates in the 2.0 to 3.0% range, the divergence between Chinese Credit and economic output is unprecedented.
Summer Of 2020
QE fundamentally changed finance. What commenced at the Federal Reserve with a post-mortgage finance Bubble, $1TN Treasury buying operation morphed into open-ended purchases of Treasuries, MBS, corporate bonds and more.
It's About Jobs, Jobs, Jobs
The Wall Street Journal referred to a “a milestone” - “a major shift in how the Fed sets interest rates by dropping its longstanding practice of preemptively lifting them to head off higher inflation.”
Weekly Commentary: Moral Hazard Quagmire
To be sure, whether it is Amazon, Tesla, Netflix, Apple, Microsoft, Google, Facebook or scores of other market darlings, a hot stock price is essential to achieving market dominance. But this era will be analyzed and debated for decades to come.
Weekly Commentary: Safe Haven Treasuries Not So Safe
A “sloppy” auction saw 30-year Treasury yields surge 21 bps this week to 1.45%, an almost seven-week closing high.
Weekly Commentary: Global Lender Of Last Resort
Understandably, attention remains focused on the dominant U.S. tech stocks, record highs in Nasdaq, sector rotation opportunities, and the Robinhood phenomenon. It’s a mania, after all.
Weekly Commentary: Precarious World
Compliments of COVID, inequality is now rightfully considered one of the critical issues of this era. Fed measures directly – and conspicuously - benefit Wall Street firms and clients, the general markets, corporations, and the wealthy.
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