Charles Hugh Smith is a thought provoking author who runs the “Of Two Minds” blog since May 2005 as a side project of self-expression, and in an unpredictable twist of evolutionary incaution, that project has ballooned into a website with about 3,500 pages that has drawn almost 60 million page views. The site's primary asset may well be the extensive global network of friends and correspondents I draw upon for intelligence and analysis. The blog is #7 in CNBC's top alternative...
Read More »Economic Growth Scare: Are Markets Rightly Scared? [Eurodollar University, Ep. 168c]
The nominal value of Chinese imports of iron ore, German exports and Japanese exports all look pretty, pretty good. But the unit volume is pretty, pretty awful. There are fewer units being utilized! This is an economic warning that is presently hidden behind hire prices (value = unit * price). -----EP. 168c TOPICS------ 00:00 INTRO: The 2021 reflation is following a pattern we have observed three times already. 00:55 What is a "growth scare"? 02:29 What is a "money...
Read More »The Dollar Moves Back to the Fulcrum between the Funding and Higher Beta Currencies
The new covid variant injected a new dynamic into the foreign exchange market. The World Health Organization cautioned against the need to impose travel restrictions, but policymakers, by and large, do not want to be bitten by the same dog twice. To err on the side of caution is to minimize one's biggest regret. The risk is that the uncertainty is not lifted quickly but lingers, which would likely unpin volatility. US and European benchmark 10-year yields fell...
Read More »Demand for crypto stamp crashes post office’s online shop
A total of 175,000 stamps will be issued, with 65,000 copies of the most common digital design but just 50 of the rarest SwissPost/Gregor Forster The launch of Swiss Post’s first “crypto” stamp has met with such high demand that the online shop was overwhelmed for several hours. Sales of the “Swiss Crypto Stamp” started at 6am on Thursday. Demand was very high, which had “temporarily led to technical problems on postshop.ch”, the Swiss Post told the AWP news agency....
Read More »Swiss Federal Council rejects two votes on pension reform
© Marlon Trottmann _ Dreamstime.com This week, the Federal Council rejected two very different initiatives aimed at changing the state pension system. In common with much of the developed world, Switzerland is facing a large gap between the money required to fund state pensions and the money flowing in to pay for them, a challenge driven by increasing life expectancy, a rise in the number of pensioners as the population ages and the way the system is funded....
Read More »Why Don’t Police Unions Protect Whistleblowers?
Sergeant Javier Esqueda of the Joliet Police Department in Illinois thought he was doing the right thing by leaking a video recorded from inside of a squad car that showed a black man, Eric Lurry, in medical distress from a drug overdose being slapped and having a police baton forced in his mouth. Lurry later died from the overdose. Sergeant Esqueda received an award from the Lamplighter Project, an advocacy group for police whistleblowers. After an internal affairs...
Read More »Jobs (US) and Inflation (EMU) Highlight the Week Ahead
The new covid variant and quick imposition of travel restrictions on several countries in southern Africa have injected a new dynamic into the mix. It may take the better part of the next couple of weeks for scientists to get a handle on what the new mutation means and the efficacy of the current vaccination and pill regime.The initial net impact has been to reduce risk, as seen in the sharp sell-off of stocks. Emerging market currencies extended their losses. ...
Read More »Stable income but higher taxes for Swiss households
An average Swiss household spends more than 14% of its gross income on housing and energy. © Keystone/Christian Beutler The average private household in Switzerland spent about 31% of its income on taxes, social security and health insurance premiums in 2019. That’s 1% up on the previous year, slightly reducing the individual budget and the chances of setting money aside. Latest official figures show that the average gross monthly income was CHF9,582 ($10,301) up...
Read More »Why Governments Hate Gold
Do governments hate gold? The answer: Yes — Governments hate gold because they cannot print it, and it is difficult for them to control. Because they cannot print it or easily control it, gold has little use to them during the never-ending schemes to tax and then redistribute wealth. India is a recent example of a government trying to control gold imports through increased taxation on imports and imposing rules, such as that importers had to re-export 20% of imports...
Read More »With Low Vaccination Rates, Africa’s Covid Deaths Remain Far below Europe and the US
Since the very beginning of the covid panic, the narrative has been this: implement severe lockdowns or your population will experience a bloodbath. Morgues will be overwhelmed, the death total toll will be astounding. On the other hand, we were assured those jurisdictions that do lock down would see only a fraction of the death toll. Then, once vaccines became available, the narrative was modified to “Get shots in arms and then covid will stop spreading. Those...
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