Why Is My US Brokerage Firm Closing My Account?

"In many cases the agreement that countries have insisted on with respect to FATCA is reciprocal. In other words, a country will say that yes they are willing to exchange information on financial accounts with the USA but the key word is 'exchange' – that is, in return, US financial institutions must also agree to provide information regarding their clients who are citizens of the country entering into the FATCA agreement with the USA. Imagine the mess this will cause for the large US banks and brokerage firms when they have to start reporting to foreign governments on their accounts for residents of these other countries." Continue reading

Continue ReadingWhy Is My US Brokerage Firm Closing My Account?

The Man Who Lost $2 Million an Hour!

"Last year, he lost about $19.4 BILLION! What a terrible year. And this year, it’s not getting any better. So far he’s lost another $10.3 billion. That’s a total loss of $29.7 billion in less than two years. But, according to Forbes, he’s still worth about $4.8 billion … so there’s no need to feel sorry for this 'poor' guy. He only has himself to blame. He’s the one who made such bad investment decisions. Last year, he made news around the globe when he said: 'I will be the world’s richest man.' He was the world’s 7th richest man. After losing a big chunk of his fortune last year, today, he’s not even one of the top three richest Brazilians." Continue reading

Continue ReadingThe Man Who Lost $2 Million an Hour!

You’re Not That Important

"Americans like to think that they’re the world’s most-important consumers. While that’s true now, our reign is coming to an end. Here’s the news: By 2015, Asia will have more consumers than all of the West combined, reclaiming its spot as #1 for the first time in 300 years, largely thanks to the emergence of China and its rapidly rising middle class. With anemic economic growth in the U.S. and many developed euro zone countries now slipping back into recession, multinational retailers have been angling for expansion elsewhere — and they are now targeting increasing numbers of consumers from emerging and frontier markets." Continue reading

Continue ReadingYou’re Not That Important

Kyle Bass: If China Doesn’t Change, ‘Full-Scale Recession’ Sometime Next Year

"'The compounded annual growth of bank assets as measured by the China Banking Regulatory Commission has been 30.8%,' Bass wrote. 'To give some perspective, a 30.8% compounded annual growth of credit in the U.S. equivalent over 5 years would be an expansion of $33 trillion. This rate of credit growth is three times the total credit system growth experienced in the U.S. at the peak of the bubble in 2006... The debt-to-equity ratios of Chinese companies are exploding as they funnel new capital, not into yield returning investments, but into the black holes on their balance sheets that have been created by a slowing growth environment.'" Continue reading

Continue ReadingKyle Bass: If China Doesn’t Change, ‘Full-Scale Recession’ Sometime Next Year

Loan Practices of China’s Biggest Banks Raising Concern

"Text message solicitations began arriving on the mobile phones of many of China’s wealthy last month, promising access to lucrative wealth management products with yields far above the government’s benchmark savings rate. The offers are not coming from fly-by-night operators but some of China’s biggest banks. They are raising huge pools of cash to finance a relatively new and highly profitable sideline business: lending outside the scrutiny of bank regulators. The complex way they go about making off-the-balance-sheet loans is at the heart of China’s $6 trillion shadow banking industry, which the government is now trying to tame." Continue reading

Continue ReadingLoan Practices of China’s Biggest Banks Raising Concern

Happy Endings in China?

"Couple potential (and ongoing) unrest regarding further urbanization with a lagging economy, an unbalanced banking sector and dwindling exports and you have a recipe for further questions about the Chinese Miracle. The biggest gamble of all may be the ChiComs' recent announcement that they intend to allow yet more free-market activity to take place. At what point do market forces begin to overwhelm ChiCom command-and-control facilities, especially when it comes to high-end monetary economy where the power resides? For all these reasons, we would imagine that even if China escapes a hard landing for now, there is one in store sooner or later ..." Continue reading

Continue ReadingHappy Endings in China?

UBS starts Singapore gold-vault service amid bullion rout

"Switzerland’s biggest bank started storing gold for wealth-management clients at a facility in Singapore. The leased vault in the Singapore FreePort is available for clients in the city-state and Hong Kong. UBS joins Deutsche Bank AG and JPMorgan Chase & Co. in offering storage services in Asia. The Singapore government has been promoting the country as a bullion-trading hub, removing a 7 percent sales tax from investment-grade precious metals last year. Millionaires in Asia outside Japan [are projected to] create $7 trillion in new wealth by 2016, boosting the share of global riches from emerging markets to about 37 percent from 24 percent in 2008." Continue reading

Continue ReadingUBS starts Singapore gold-vault service amid bullion rout

Bill Bonner: Are We Approaching a “Second Coming” For Gold?

"There are no moms or pops left in the gold market. Even serious, knowledgeable investors have gotten out. From what we read, it seems more like a bottom than a top. The public is not interested. And the professionals hate gold. If we were speculating – and we are not – we would bet that gold is a better buy than a sell. The price could go anywhere. But unlike the Fed's paper, gold won't go away. And, at $1,100 an ounce, gold is likely to be one of those few investments you don't mind telling your children and grandchildren about. If you buy, wait five years. Then let us know how it worked out." Continue reading

Continue ReadingBill Bonner: Are We Approaching a “Second Coming” For Gold?

Dell’s Cash Overseas Is Needed at Home, But U.S. Taxes Loom Large

"Advisers working on Dell Inc.'s $24.4 billion buyout are trying to solve a problem: how to use the computer maker's foreign cash without paying a $2.6 billion U.S. tax bill. That could be the cost levied to use the money held in foreign subsidiaries. The efforts highlight a current bind of corporate America: While U.S. companies are holding more cash than ever, the tangle of U.S. tax policies and corporate cash-preservation strategies means much of it isn't readily available for some of the most important corporate decisions, such as returning cash to shareholders or mergers and acquisitions." Continue reading

Continue ReadingDell’s Cash Overseas Is Needed at Home, But U.S. Taxes Loom Large

Shanghai Futures Exchange To Begin Gold/Silver Night Trading

"'The U.S. and Europe still have the pricing power, although prices are usually being affected by a number of factors, such as liquidity and overall economic conditions,' said Yang Maijun, chairman of the Board at the Shanghai Futures Exchange, which is going to start night trading hours for its gold and silver contracts on July 5. 'The purpose of night trading is to help prices [on the Shanghai exchange] better connect with global prices, and to help achieve our goal of internationalizing our contracts,' Mr. Yang told the audience at the Lujiazui Forum, an annual gathering of financial policy makers and executives in Shanghai." Continue reading

Continue ReadingShanghai Futures Exchange To Begin Gold/Silver Night Trading