Showing posts with label Links. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Links. Show all posts

Sunday, November 27

Recommended links & Photo of the Week

Coming soon to a Eurozone bank near you?

1. Beware of falling masonry (Economist) Good tactical overview of the eurozone crisis and some of the options being considered. See also 'Banks Build Contingency for Breakup of the Euro' (NYT)

2. Latvian bank Krajbanka set to be wound up (AFP) Above bank run image is of Krajbanka.

3. The Rise and Fall of Bitcoin (Wired) Contrary to the title I don't think this is the last we've heard of Bitcoin, or other virtual currencies, but an interesting and informative read nonetheless.

4. Prepare for riots in euro collapse, UK Foreign Office warns (Telegraph)

5. Why Not Break-Up Citigroup? (Simon Johnson) Citibank has blown-up and required a bailout three times in the last three decades, or once on average every ten years.

6. How could Reebok sell trainers for $1? (BBC) Contrary to popular believe it's not all glum news here at TPC. I was able to see the remarkable Nobel Peace Prize winner Professor Muhammad Yunus speak this week (video below). His bank, Grameen, is doing amazing things and gets a BHAG nod.

7. MF’s Missing Money Makes You Wonder About Goldman (Jonathan Weil)


Thursday, November 10

Euro Reading Roundup - Who Will Be Getting Booted Out of the Eurozone?

Or perhaps the more important question is which country will be the first to experience a a more serious bank run than the slow motion runs which have been occurring in Greece, Ireland, and Italy?

1. Departures from the Eurozone are "inevitable" (Rodrik)

2. Europe's Darkness at Noon (Eichengreen)

3. Thinking Through the Unthinkable (Wolf)

4. 'In 31 years, I've never seen markets this crazy' (Jim Cramer)

5. Wall Street Ignoring Europe? (Tim Duy) Smells like 2007

Tuesday, November 1

Recommended links

1. Why is Greece turning down the “bailout” (Tyler Cowen)

2. Circular commitments lead to a Ponzi economy (Letter to the FT). Here's the key quote:
If governments stand behind banks and banks stand behind governments and the central bank lends freely to both and also underwrites financial markets, then financial asset prices become completely detached from economic reality. In this “system”, the central bank implementing more quantitative easing is no different, in economic terms, from Bernie Madoff marking up his client accounts every month.
3. The Bailout That Busted China's Banks (WSJ)

4. Mr. Hoenig Goes to Washington (Simon Johnson)

5. Bond Dealers See Fed Holding Rate Near 0% at Least Through First Half of 2013 (WSJ)

6. Papandreou Is Right to Let the Greeks Decide (Spiegel)

7. Live European debt crisis coverage (BBC) and (Telegraph)

Friday, October 28

Recommended links

1. Rogoff: 80% chance that Greece will leave the euro (Bloomberg)

2. More Greece love from Sarkozy: Greece should have been denied euro (BBC)

3. Nominal GDP targeting is unlikely to work (INET)

4. World power swings back to America (Telegraph)

5. Hugh Hendry at LSE Alternative Investment Conference (Greshman's Law). My writeup on Hugh's Jan. 2011 interview at the AIC can be found here. Hugh has agreed to come back to the 2012 AIC conference, which I look forward to attending.

6. Portugal enters the 'Grecian vortex' (Telegraph). AEP has been on a roll lately.

7. Italian 10-Year Yield Tops 6% in Auction, Setting Record (CNBC)

Sunday, October 23

Recommended links

1. Is there a shadowy plot behind gold? (FT)

2. Ray Dalio video interview (Charlie Rose). Ray doesn't have the most compelling television presence, but as the world's largest hedge fund manager he's clearly doing something right. Here is an interesting earlier read from the New Yorker on him and his firm, Bridgewater.

3. Eurozone summit - despair and backbiting in the corridors of power (Telegraph)

4. Steve Jobs Was Willing To 'Rip Off' Everyone Else... But Was Pissed About Android Copying iPhone? (TechDirt)

5. Michael Pettis Talks China (Infectious Greed)

6. €1.5bn Dexia loans used to buy shares in...Dexia (FT)

7. Generation X Doesn’t Want to Hear It (Emptypage)