Current issues with the market - Any ideas on avoiding the end?

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I know people shit on ZH for being doomers consistently, but at least they are willing to explore avenues of thought most other writers otherwise would not do so openly.
ZeroHedge was good years and years ago due to the independent/ free thinking and Austrian School of Economics leaning community. Once Trump got the nomination in 2016, the quality of the community went down precipitously because "Tyler" started catering to biased/emotionally-invested Trumpsters for clicks. "Fight Club" (intelligent but crass debate where even if you 'lost' you still learned something) turned into "Retarded Monkeys Flinging Shit Club."

Then when the Covid-19 thing happened, Tyler started fearmongering/sensationalizing it as one of the Horses of the Apocalypse for the fearporn clicks. I literally bounced cold turkey one day (several years ago), and have never, ever, looked at it since. To me, this is unforgivable journalism, as I (along with Ron Paul) believe the panic caused more damage than the actual virus.

Anyways, I don't know what it's like in current year so if you find value in it then good, but that's my little anecdote about it.
 
there will be no crisis, the ECB and the EU will do EVERYTHING they can to prevent any crisis, even if it means a overnight rate cut and QE.
Doomers don't really seem to understand central banking, hence why they're always posting about how the global economy will collapse but actually for real this time because this is different from the last fifteen times I've predicted the global economy would collapse.

Meanwhile shit keeps chugging along.
 
Anyways, I don't know what it's like in current year so if you find value in it then good, but that's my little anecdote about it.
It's worse than it was before (lots of Political TES and shit these days on there). I'm still trying to find a site similar to the good days of it but it really was kind of like lightning in a bottle.
 
TOP SIGNAL
SELL SELL SELL SELL

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Tweet | Archive since he will delete this and deactivate once again when the market dumps
 
Robert Kiyosaki says the Bank of Japan is gonna go down. Take with appropriate salt as Kiyosaki is a yuge doomer.

Wouldn't surprise me. Japan's debt to GDP ratio is huge and their economy stagnant. I think they had they had their central bank rate at negative interest for most of the past few years. They were among the worst hit by inflation (relative to the USD) last year, worse than the Eurozone.
 
Wouldn't surprise me. Japan's debt to GDP ratio is huge and their economy stagnant. I think they had they had their central bank rate at negative interest for most of the past few years. They were among the worst hit by inflation (relative to the USD) last year, worse than the Eurozone.
Japan never really recovered from the 1991 crash and a shrinking population. I think we will see something very similar in the US and the west as a whole (It was averted in 2008 kinda with China buying the majority of the debt ... to get slapped in the face by the US with Trump but that's a longer geopolitics rant). It will be be alleviated by immigration, but it will not stop the fundamental malaise until many of these too big to fail banks and businesses actually fail.
At some point, the clock must reset.
 
Robert Kiyosaki says the Bank of Japan is gonna go down. Take with appropriate salt as Kiyosaki is a yuge doomer.
The Japanese central bank is save, they can just print more money.
Europe is the place to watch, the retarded swiss action did hurt alot of pension funds and there could be smaller funds slowly dieing from those wounds.
 
Robert Kiyosaki says the Bank of Japan is gonna go down. Take with appropriate salt as Kiyosaki is a yuge doomer.

Bank of Japan? Pfff I look at this with less than 24 hours to go. Brace for impact.

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So what should I have right now? Cash, physical or digital? Stocks? Gold? Lead? Beanie Babies?
Land, 50% of all you own. Crypto, 10% of all you own. Silver 5% of all you own
Gold, 5% of all you own. Vehicles 10% of all you own. Guns food and ammo 5% of all you own. 15% of all you own being everything else and cash.

At least that is what I have done in the last 2 years. To be fair, part of the 15% is also a dog. She's a good girl and worth her weight in gold.
 
Land, 50% of all you own. Crypto, 10% of all you own. Silver 5% of all you own
Gold, 5% of all you own. Vehicles 10% of all you own. Guns food and ammo 5% of all you own. 15% of all you own being everything else and cash.

At least that is what I have done in the last 2 years. To be fair, part of the 15% is also a dog. She's a good girl and worth her weight in gold.
Come on now mindless, a herd of Geese/Turkeys are much more effective guard animals than dogs and good source of meat... You can't eat dog liver. God forbid some madman domesticates Canadian geese, ATF agents be on suicide watch because they know only how to shoot people and dogs.

Back to market talk. What in the world caused that market rally this week? End of quarter?
 
I know it's yahoo but this is interesting if true (Archive):

Depositors drained another $126 billion from U.S. banks during the week ending March 22, according to new Federal Reserve data. This time the outflow came from the nation's largest institutions.

The biggest 25 banks lost $90 billion on a seasonally adjusted basis, according to the Fed. The smaller banks, which suffered massive withdrawals the previous week as regulators seized regional lenders Silicon Valley Bank and Signature Bank, were able to stabilize their outflows. They actually gained back $6 billion on a seasonally adjusted basis.

Total industry deposits fell to $17.3 trillion, down 4.4% from the same week a year ago. That is the lowest level since July 2021.

The new numbers reinforce some trends that were already in place. Deposits had been declining at all banks before the Silicon Valley failure, falling each of the first two months of the year. Deposits for all banks were also down 5% annually in the fourth quarter of 2022.

Many observers attribute this industrywide shift to pressure being applied by an aggressive Federal Reserve campaign to lower inflation.

During the early part of the pandemic, when interest rates were historically low, banks were awash in deposits. When the Fed began moving those rates higher to cool the economy, customers who had deposits began seeking out places with higher yields. The first year-over-year deposit decline for all banks came in the second quarter of 2022.

Some of this money is flowing to money market funds. Since the beginning of January, investors have poured $508 billion into those funds, according to a research note from Bank of America, the highest quarterly inflow since a peak earlier in the pandemic. Another $60 billion was added to these assets in the past week.

Government and industry officials have been working to prevent massive deposit outflows in the aftermath of March's bank failures. Regulators pledged to cover all depositors at both banks they seized, hoping that would calm any panic, and also promised to help other regional banks if needed. Eleven giant banks also decided to provide one troubled regional lender, First Republic, with $30 billion in uninsured deposits to stabilize its situation.
I wonder if this money is going toward spending due to inflation, or moving to credit unions or under a mattress?
 
I wonder if this money is going toward spending due to inflation, or moving to credit unions or under a mattress?
It's delightful how panicked and frenzied they're getting because we lowly "depositors" have the gall to come collect our money from the robber barons we know are stealing it from us. Maybe we wouldn't be trying to opt out as much as possible if they weren't so aggressively trying to crash the plane with no survivors and making no effort to hide it anymore.
 
It's delightful how panicked and frenzied they're getting because we lowly "depositors" have the gall to come collect our money from the robber barons we know are stealing it from us. Maybe we wouldn't be trying to opt out as much as possible if they weren't so aggressively trying to crash the plane with no survivors and making no effort to hide it anymore.
No joke , if you are saving any amount of cash in a bank you are a fool. I use the banks solely as pass through entities at this point. They are for paying bills, and that is about it. I rarely have more then a couple hundred bucks in either of my checking accounts. As for my savings accounts, the moment regulators said banks could use those too for loans was the moment I took all my money out of them.
 
Envision (big medical group that staffs emergency departments across the country) is in technical default and are moving assets into a subsidiary. Looks like they'll try a Texas two-step.

I said way back when that the rate hikes will cause these private equity owned medical groups to collapse because they were already having trouble servicing debt. So now it begins.
 
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