Greek Central Bank Warns Country "Unlikely To Survive Another Bout Of Instability" As Bank "Jog" Accelerates
Something unexpected happened on the road to the latest Greek "recovery": the local population no longer believes one is coming.
Something unexpected happened on the road to the latest Greek "recovery": the local population no longer believes one is coming.
Submitted by Jim Quinn via The Burning Platform blog,
Late in 2015, Germany's Handelsblatt reported, erroneously, that Venezuela was the best performing asset class of 2015.
It wasn't. The reason this was in error is because if one adjusts the returns into the real currency exchange rate, one which reflects the true implosion of the economy, instead of the government "mandated" one, the result is very different, one which shows that contrary to popular wisdom, during hyperinflation stocks are not a good store of value.
It didn't take long for the momentum-chasing fundamental strategists to readjust their immediate stock price targets on the heels of the i) failure of the Santa Rally and ii) the worst start to the year in Chinese stock market history. Case in point, moments ago JPM's equity strategy team released its first note for the year in which it says that "we take the view that equities are unlikely to perform well on a 12-24 month horizon" adding that "the regime of buying the dips might be over and selling any rallies might be the new one."