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Albert Edwards Finally Blows Up: "I'm Not Really Sure How Much More Of This I Can Take"

Albert Edwards Finally Blows Up: "I'm Not Really Sure How Much More Of This I Can Take"

Earlier this week we described the personal come to non-GAAP Jesus moment of trading commentator Richard Breslow, who confessed in no uncertain terms that he has had it with endless central banking intervention: "a portfolio built to only withstand stress thanks to central bank intervention is one destined to blow-up spectacularly. The embedded flaw in this new logic is that central banks give investors perfect foresight.

President Obama Pushes Toxic TTIP Deal During UK Visit

According to the British NGO, War on Want, the real reason why Obama wants Britain to stay in the EU is to impose the TTIP deal on Europe They warn that the US President is currently in the UK to force the “toxic” Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership deal on Britain, a move which would allow US firms to demolish the state health system and more… Obama penned an opinion column in Britain’s Daily Telegraph newspaper where among other things he outlined why he believes Britain should remain in the European Union (EU).

The World's Greatest Monetary Charlatan Is Nearly Out Of Tricks

The World's Greatest Monetary Charlatan Is Nearly Out Of Tricks

Submitted by David Stockman via Contra Corner blog,

Mario had a bee in his bonnet yesterday morning. Apparently, the chorus of German voices pointing to the obvious—- that his policies are killing savers, insurance companies, pension funds and banks—-got his dander up:

“We have a mandate to preserve price stability for the whole of the euro zone, not only for Germany,” he said. “We obey the law, not the politicians, because we are independent.”

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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