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Hillary Clinton's Full 'Speech' To Goldman Sachs

Hillary Clinton's Full 'Speech' To Goldman Sachs

Given the fact that a snowball has a better chance in hell than the American public ever seeing a transcript of Hillary Clinton's various million-dollar speeches to Goldman Sachs employees, K.J. Noh, Counterpunch's resident satirist in chief, unleashes his best guess at what was said.. and if not, what was implied... Liberty Blitzkrieg's Mike Krieger excerpts the true meaning of Clinton:

These Are The Four Questions Goldman's Clients Want Answered

These Are The Four Questions Goldman's Clients Want Answered

There is little joy for bulls in David Kostin's latest weekly kickstart, in which the chief Goldman strategist says that "the S&P 500 has reached our 2016 year-end target of 2100. We expect that the index will remain at this level given tepid US GDP growth, a mixed earnings outlook, and elevated valuation. Corporate repurchases are the main source of US equity demand. We forecast S&P 500 gross buybacks will rise by 7% to $600 billion in 2016.

Why Has An "Apolitical" Fed Governor Donated To Hillary Four Times?

Why Has An "Apolitical" Fed Governor Donated To Hillary Four Times?

Any time a Fed president, governor or chairman trots out the trite cliche that the Fed is "apolitical" we can't help but laugh for one simple reason: not only is the Fed not apolitical, but is very closely ideologically tied with whichever party promotes deficit spending which by definition is inflationary: more deficits mean more debt, means more opportunity for the Fed to show off its "inflation" creating skills; and in a Keynesian world, a stable 2% inflation is the lubricant that drives and stabilizes the financial system - the Fed's true mandate.

Kuroda To The Rescue: Stocks Rebound After Latest BOJ Rumor Sends Yen Plunging

Kuroda To The Rescue: Stocks Rebound After Latest BOJ Rumor Sends Yen Plunging

Just as US equity futures were about to roll over following some very substantial misses yesterday by the likes of Google, Microsoft, Starbucks and a plunge in Visa shares, overnight who came to the markets' rescue but the BOJ, when shortly after midnight Bloomberg reported that "according to people familiar with talks at the BOJ" which is the traditional keyword for a BOJ source testing out the market's reaction, Japan's central bank may "help" local banks to lend by offering a negative rate on some loans.

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