Happy Tax Freedom Day?

"Tax Freedom Day is the day that 'the nation as a whole has earned enough money to pay its total tax bill for the year.' National Tax Freedom Day comes just a few days behind our deadline to pay up, with the exception of Texas, where residents have a lower average state and local tax burden. Tax Freedom Day for Texans began on April 10. On average, Americans nationwide will work 40 days just to pay their income tax, another 25 days for payroll taxes, 15 days for excise taxes, and 12 days for property taxes. Overall, Americans will spend more on taxes than on food, housing, and clothing combined this year." Continue reading

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North Korea Is Like a Misbehaving Child—Ignore It

"Although at the official level, ignoring North Korean blustering, while taking adequate measures to defend the United States—not South Korea—from the future limited threat that North Korea might pose, the U.S. government should not discourage or have disdain for visits by private citizens, such as Dennis Rodman. These private visits help break the isolation that the Kim regime needs to survive and that U.S. government regularly haplessly provides with economic sanctions and counter bluster. Let’s show the publicity-hungry Kim Jong-un that his words and actions are a lot less important to the United States than he thinks." Continue reading

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Gold: Fear vs. Greed – and Taxes [Bullish]

"I've yet to be convinced that the Keynesians are right, governments of the world have cured what ails the global economy with their virtual printing presses, and the next boom is a done deal. That doesn't mean gold can't or won't go lower – just that if it does, the fundamentals say it's a buying opportunity. I know that some analysts are saying that having retreated more than 20%, gold has entered 'official' bear market territory, and that signals a long wait for recovery, but experience has shown that when gold sells off for the wrong reasons, it usually bounces back. Strongly. Remember the second half of the 1970s gold bull market." Continue reading

Continue ReadingGold: Fear vs. Greed – and Taxes [Bullish]

Historic Gold Crash. What To Expect Next [Bearish]

"First, central bank money-printing has lost its impact on the markets. Second, austerity measures in Europe and the United States are also overpowering the inflationary impact of money-printing. Third, and most importantly in my view, the Cyprus confiscation of uninsured depositor money has completely turned the world upside down. Money is no longer safe in a bank in Europe. That, in turn, is causing hundreds of billions of dollars to essentially go into hiding. But not in gold, which is subject to confiscation, real or imagined. Fourth, Japan’s new aggressive policy to devalue its currency is also not bullish for gold." Continue reading

Continue ReadingHistoric Gold Crash. What To Expect Next [Bearish]

David Stockman: This Is a Giant Ponzi Scheme, It’s Just Debt on Top of More Debt

"Two days ago, former White House Budget Director in the Reagan Administration, David Stockman, dropped some financial bombs in an interview on FOX. He said the Social Security Trust Fund was 'filled with confetti.' Stockman said if the Fed was 'gone fishing' for six weeks (meaning it would stop the $85 billion a month 'open-ended' money printing), 'there would be calamity in the markets.' It seems everybody on both sides of the aisle hates his new book called 'The Great Deformation.' That tells me he’s doing something right." Continue reading

Continue ReadingDavid Stockman: This Is a Giant Ponzi Scheme, It’s Just Debt on Top of More Debt

Bill Bonner: Tough luck for investors!

"For five years now, the US private sector has been trying to deleverage - while the public sector insists that it borrow more. Result: economic stagnation. Also, US consumers have watched their wages and family incomes fall for more than ten years. And adjusted for inflation (however you calculate it) investors are still below where they were in 2000. And now, the world has changed...almost the opposite of 1980, when the big boom began. Today, stocks are expensive, not cheap like they were in 1980. Interest rates are low, not high like they were in 1980. Total debt is now around 350% of GDP, not 150% like it was in 1980." Continue reading

Continue ReadingBill Bonner: Tough luck for investors!

Fed Could End Up Paying Banks $77 Billion Annually on Excess Reserves

"The Federal Reserve could pay more than $77 billion a year in interest on the excess cash reserves it holds for commercial banks if rates follow the highest path forecast by Fed policy makers. The central bank already has paid more than $13 billion since 2008 when Congress authorized interest on reserve balances as part of financial-rescue legislation. The Fed earns interest income on its bond holdings and, after covering its operating expenses, returns the profit to the U.S. Treasury. Last year, the Fed remitted $88.4 billion. As the interest payments on reserves rise, this profit could shrink or disappear." Continue reading

Continue ReadingFed Could End Up Paying Banks $77 Billion Annually on Excess Reserves

Echoes of the bubble in agents’ descriptions of real estate markets

"Astonishingly low mortgage rates, which the Federal Reserve has driven down in the hopes of stimulating borrowing and goosing the economy, have given qualified purchasers more buying power. A 1 percent decline in mortgage rates increases buying power by about 10 percent. Even though agents might worry about overvalued homes, that's not stopping buyers from bidding up prices, a phenomenon happening in markets with tight inventories across the U.S. Maxwell Rabin, an agent at TTR Sotheby's International Realty, said the Washington, D.C. market is experiencing 'very, very high demand and almost historically low supply.'" Continue reading

Continue ReadingEchoes of the bubble in agents’ descriptions of real estate markets

Bill Bonner: Is this the end for the bull market in gold?

"Is this the end for the bull market in gold? Everybody says so. And this was before gold tumbled on Friday. The fact is, the masses never got anywhere near gold. Not even close. Most people have never seen a gold coin....and few are as reckless as the aforementioned Mr. Norstog. Most are even more reckless! They'll wait gold to hit $2,000...or $3,000 before they buy. Which is why we're nowhere close to the top. Wall Street never marketed gold, deftly...or any other way. Not even in its usual greedy, heavy handed fashion. And the masses never bought it. Just the opposite. As the price of gold rose we saw ads in the paper soliciting people to SELL gold." Continue reading

Continue ReadingBill Bonner: Is this the end for the bull market in gold?

Iron Age burial site points to long-lost glories of Gaul

"During this time, the Celts expanded from their core territory in central Europe to as far afield as northern Scotland and the Atlantic coast of Spain. They clashed with the emerging Roman empire, whose writers recorded the invaders as pale-skinned savages, dressed in breeches with bleached hair, who cut off their enemies’ heads, preserving those of high rank in cedar oil. The barbarian image, though, has been dispelled by historical research in recent decades. It has laid bare a complex civilisation that had a mastery of metal and a trading system which spanned Europe and generated great wealth." Continue reading

Continue ReadingIron Age burial site points to long-lost glories of Gaul