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by
Jason Farkas
11/13/2009 11:30:00 AM
In Part II of this article, EWI's Jason Farkas explains further why hyperinflation in the U.S. is likely not something we should worry about over the next few years -- and what signs to look for when it does become a real threat.
Filed Under:
Robert Prechter, conquer the crash, inflation, hyperinflation, deflation, deficit spending, Zimbabwe, quantitative easing
Category:
Economy
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by
Jason Farkas
11/12/2009 1:30:00 PM
The situation in the U.S. situation is different from bouts with hyperinflation in Argentina, Mexico and Brazil. It also seems reasonable to examine hyperinflation in another nation -- Zimbabwe -- in order to answer a few important questions...
Filed Under:
Robert Prechter, conquer the crash, inflation, hyperinflation, deflation, deficit spending, Zimbabwe
Category:
Economy
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by
Susan C. Walker
11/6/2009 3:30:00 PM
As bad as that unemployment level is now, the upcoming bear market and accompanying deflationary depression will make it worse, says Bob Prechter. Here's why.
Filed Under:
unemployment, deflation, conquer the crash
Category:
Classic Prechter
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by
Jason Farkas
11/5/2009 3:45:00 PM
Large commercial buildings are illiquid. This is especially true during an economic contraction and credit crunch. Although roughly half the size of the residential housing market, the commercial real estate market is still twice the size of the total U.S. stock market, so its problems are too large to ignore. They include...
Filed Under:
Robert Prechter, conquer the crash, comercial real estate, reit, liquidity, leverage
Category:
Real Estate
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by
Susan C. Walker
10/23/2009 4:15:00 PM
Bob Prechter is issuing a second edition of Conquer the Crash with 188 new pages of real-time commentary on markets and the mounting prospects for deflation -- rather than inflation -- to become the true threat to the U.S. economy. In the first edition, he described dozens of today’s financial and economic troubles. He not only explained why they would happen but also advised readers how to protect themselves from a deflationary depression. Many of the events forecast in the book still lie ahead.
Filed Under:
conquer the crash, deflation, bailouts, derivatives, Fannie Mae, Banks, rating services, tax receipts
Category:
Classic Prechter
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by
Nico Isaac
3/13/2009 4:15:00 PM
Suppose that all the conventional financial wisdom you've ever heard was written onto a large chalkboard -- and then someone gave you an eraser, a box of chalk, and the knowledge of how financial markets Really work. That may be the kind of vision you'd have after reading Bob Prechter’s best selling book “Conquer The Crash.” As the saying goes, you'll never think about the social, financial, or political world in the same way again.
Filed Under:
conquer the crash, Economy, Real Estate, bonds, Banks, Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, credit crisis
Category:
Economy
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by
Susan C. Walker
10/9/2008 5:30:00 PM
People have lost confidence, and the markets reflect their concern. Without confidence, the financial house of cards falls down. This is exactly what Bob Prechter writes in his best-selling business book, Conquer the Crash.
Filed Under:
Dow, confidence, conquer the crash, Federal Reserve
Category:
Economy
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by
Nico Isaac
8/27/2008 5:45:00 PM
Think the U.S. economy has gone to the dogs? You may be more right than you thought. A Wednesday, August 27 L.A. Times article explains why consumer confidence is sinking to a 40-year low, via a science experiment involving -- well -- two obedient canines. Here’s the gist:
Filed Under:
credit crisis, banking crisis, housing crisis, us economy, conquer the crash
Category:
Economy
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by
Nico Isaac
8/7/2008 4:15:00 PM
Suppose that all the conventional financial wisdom you've ever heard was written onto a large chalkboard -- and then someone gave you an eraser, a box of chalk, and the knowledge of how financial markets really work. That may be the kind of vision you'd have after reading Bob Prechter’s best selling book “Conquer The Crash.”
Filed Under:
Fannie Mae, George Bush, housing market, conquer the crash
Category:
Economy
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by
Editorial Staff
5/2/2008 4:15:00 PM
The big question that still remains about the demise of Bear Stearns is, how did its mortgage-backed securities lose their value so quickly? It's a question that Bob Prechter has pondered in a more general way for his best-selling business book, Conquer the Crash. In this excerpt, Bob carefully explains exactly how financial values can disappear.
Filed Under:
Bear Stearns, subprime, asset prices, stock markets, bond market, Bear market, deflation Federal Reserve, JP Morgan, conquer the crash
Category:
Classic Prechter
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by
Nico Isaac
4/21/2008 4:15:00 PM
Regarding the question raised by today’s headline, “Do Stocks Reflect The Economy?” -- the one-word answer is NO. The cornerstone of conventional economic wisdom is pure baloney.
Filed Under:
Stocks, Economy, Wall Street, crude oi, housing, Citigroup, DJIA, conquer the crash, roaring twenties, new economy
Category:
Stocks
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by
Nico Isaac
4/18/2008 4:15:00 PM
According to a recent review in the New York Times, “Two Angry Books” have just published, to gauge the enormous toll the credit crisis is having on the U.S. economy. Quick synopsis: the American public is mad as hell and they’re not gonna fake it anymore.
Filed Under:
credit crisis, debt bubble, housing boom, Federal Reserve, banking industry, conquer the crash, Real Estate, mortgage debt
Category:
Economy
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by
Robert Folsom
3/10/2008 5:15:00 PM
Several times on this page recently I've talked about housing and stock market forecasts that Bob Prechter (and other Elliott Wave International analysts) made several years ago. We've heard from a great many subscribers who were helped by these forecasts. Yet I've also heard from folks who correctly point out that, from the 2002 to the 2007 high, the Dow Jones Industrials virtually doubled. Their basic question is, didn't we miss a big opportunity to be "long" or make the even bigger mistake of being "short"?...
Filed Under:
conquer the crash, stock indexes, stock market bottom, stock market turmoil
Category:
Classic Prechter
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by
Nico Isaac
3/10/2008 3:45:00 PM
Whether it's minutes from the most recent Federal Open Market Committee, excerpts from the latest beige book reading, or some suggestive cough or sneeze in between -- the mainstream media answers the call of the Fed’s voice like a cat to an electric can opener. History shows, however, that all the Fed has to say -- and do -- comes AFTER the biggest moves in U.S. economy have already taken place.
Filed Under:
Federal Reserve, Fed, interest rate cuts, cash infusion, $200 billion, termination auction facility, Labor Department, jobless rate, great depression, conquer the crash
Category:
Economy
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by
Robert Folsom
3/7/2008 5:15:00 PM
Yesterday I said that the Economist magazine had just published a favorable review of a book about the housing market crisis. The author is a respected financial journalist, and a thumbs up from a publication like the Economist suggests a book that deserves to be taken seriously. But consider these other quotes, specifically the "who" & "when" behind them...
Filed Under:
Bear market, conquer the crash, deflation, Fed rate cut, Federal Reserve, Real Estate, recession, subprime, subprime mortgages, Wall Street
Category:
Real Estate
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by
Susan C. Walker
3/6/2008 4:30:00 PM
The Super Tuesday primaries are history, and we still don't know who will be the Democratic and Republican nominees for the U.S. presidency this year. It's a situation similar to not yet knowing whether the U.S. economy has already slipped into a recession.
Filed Under:
recession, Super Bowl, Super Tuesday, conquer the crash
Category:
Economy
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by
Nico Isaac
3/3/2008 5:15:00 PM
According to Wall Street, well-established rating services are to corporations what Roger Ebert is to cinema. Two thumbs up or AAA -- it's all the same. Or is it? Time and again, the hired prognosticators do not "see" the real value of a company until its completely obvious to everyone else. By then, it's too late...
Filed Under:
Moody's, enron, AAA rating, investment grade, subprime bonds, conquer the crash, Ambac, MBIA
Category:
Economy
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by
Alan Hall
8/13/2007 2:45:00 PM
Stock markets closed lower today, Monday, August 13, 2007
Filed Under:
real-estate, conquer the crash, banking
Category:
Economy
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by
Alan Hall
8/6/2007 11:20:00 AM
Things are getting wild out there. The S&P 500 had its biggest one-day drop in 6 months on Friday (August 3), the same day Bear Stearns CFO said the "bond turmoil is worse than the Internet bubble." Cramer threw a tantrum on CNBC. Industries, funds, markets and individuals are hemorrhaging money. A million homeowners will enter foreclosure this year. You're probably wondering what will happen next.
Filed Under:
Real Estate, conquer the crash, credit crunch
Category:
Economy
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by
Alan Hall
12/5/2006 11:40:00 AM
The housing market is beginning to resemble a watermelon I once floated in a pond overnight to cool. The next day a small hole was in one end and the red interior was completely gone, hollowed out to the sour green rind, sculpted by little teeth. Some muskrat had a feast.
Filed Under:
Real Estate, housing, real-estate, Economy, conquer the crash, credit crunch, personal finance
Category:
Real Estate
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The Elliott Wave Principle is a detailed description of how financial markets behave. The description reveals that mass psychology swings from pessimism to optimism and back in a natural sequence, creating specific Elliott wave patterns in price movements. Each pattern has implications regarding the position of the market within its overall progression, past, present and future. The purpose of Elliott Wave International’s market-oriented publications is to outline the progress of markets in terms of the Wave Principle and to educate interested parties in the successful application of the Wave Principle. While a course of conduct regarding investments can be formulated from such application of the Wave Principle, at no time will Elliott Wave International make specific recommendations for any specific person, and at no time may a reader, caller or viewer be justified in inferring that any such advice is intended. Investing carries risk of losses, and trading futures or options is especially risky because these instruments are highly leveraged, and traders can lose more than their initial margin funds. Information provided by Elliott Wave International is expressed in good faith, but it is not guaranteed. The market service that never makes mistakes does not exist. Long-term success trading or investing in the markets demands recognition of the fact that error and uncertainty are part of any effort to assess future probabilities. Please ask your broker or your advisor to explain all risks to you before making any trading and investing decisions.
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