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Fruit, Vegetable Prices Soar In Canada: "If You Insist On Eating Tomatoes, You're Going To Pay For It"

Fruit, Vegetable Prices Soar In Canada: "If You Insist On Eating Tomatoes, You're Going To Pay For It"

Earlier this month, we documented the surging price of fresh produce in Canada, where the plunging loonie is creating a nightmare for shoppers in grocery aisles across the country.

Because Canada imports more than three quarters of its fresh fruits and vegetables, the inexorable decline of the Canadian dollar has driven up prices on everything from cucumbers to cauliflower to tomatoes, and as we showed via a series of tweets from incredulous supermarket shoppers, Canadians are not pleased.

“Three bucks. For a cucumber,” one shopper wrote.

The Bursting of the Bond Bubble Has Begun Pt 3

The Bursting of the Bond Bubble Has Begun Pt 3

As we outlined last week, the bursting of the bond bubble has begun.

CNBC and the financial media may spend 99% of their time talking about stocks, but bonds are the single most important issue for Central Banks.

When you consider everything in the context of the bond bubble, every Central Bank policy begins to make sense.

1)   Central Banks cut interest rates to zero to make bond payments smaller.

The Recession As Seen In Houston, Texas

The Recession As Seen In Houston, Texas

The Texas recession is only in its early innings, but we were pleasantly surprised to learn, courtesy of a reader, that it may not be as severe as some expect thanks to good samaritans such Houston-based Gramercy Cleaners on Richmond avenue whose compassion with the imploding energy sector is manifesting itself in service discounts.

When the shale crisis spills over to the banking sector, will we see New York cleaners likewise discounting services to laid off investment bankers? Somehow we doubt it.

Central Banks Have "Over-Promised" What Can Actually Be Delivered

Via Scotiabank's Guy Haselmann,

Markets need to retreat from dependency on central bank stimulus which they falsely believe provides the magical elixir that fixes all economic and financial market woes.

At some point during the past few years, central bank stimulus has gone from a net benefit to a source of financial market ailments.  Investors who have rightly arrived at this conclusion have shifted from dip buyers in risk assets to sellers of up-ticks (see January 6th note ‘Down Side Up’).

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