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Bitcoin, Ethereum Plunge Accelerates As Scaling Deadline Looms

Bitcoin, Ethereum Plunge Accelerates As Scaling Deadline Looms

Yesterday it was Bitcoin, today it is Ethereum that is taking the brunt of selling pressure (down 20%) but the dumping of virtual currencies is evident across the entire crypto space with the biggest market cap coins tumbling to 2-month lows...

Once again it is the so-called 'civil war' that is weighing on the entire virtual currency space as we noted previously, behind the conflict is an ideological split about bitcoin's rightful identity...

O Inflation, Inflation! Wherefore Art Thou Inflation?

O Inflation, Inflation! Wherefore Art Thou Inflation?

A lot of eyes were on Janet Yellen’s testimony in front of the Senate Banking committee last week, as investors wanted to hear more clues about a potential change in the economic and monetary policy of the Federal Reserve. People seemed to be particularly interested in finding out more about the expected rate hike pace and the reduction of the size of the Fed’s balance sheet.

Global Stocks Soared $1.5 Trillion This Week - Now 102% Of World GDP

Global Stocks Soared $1.5 Trillion This Week - Now 102% Of World GDP

Thanks, it seems, to a few short words from Janet Yellen, the world's stock markets added over $1.5 trillion to wealthy people's net worth this week, sending global market cap to record highs.

The value of global equity markets reached a record high $76.28 trillion yesterday, up a shocking 18.6% since President Trump was elected. This is the same surge in global stocks that was seen as the market front-ran QE2 and QE3.

This was the biggest spike in global equity markets since 2016.

 

A Bearish Citi Warns "Bigger Forces Are At Play", Pointing To Its 'Chart Of The Week'

A Bearish Citi Warns "Bigger Forces Are At Play", Pointing To Its 'Chart Of The Week'

Over the next three weeks, the investing world will shift its attention away from the endless chatter of central bankers and concerns about the state of the economy, and instead focus on second quarter earning season, which launched on Friday with results from the three biggest US banks which showed that chronically low volatility is anything but good for trading revenues (as Jamie Dimon made all too clear in a bizarre Friday rant). As previewed last week, and is the norm, we get most of the US numbers first, followed by Europe and then Japan.

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