Growing Pains for the Dollar and Permanent Volatility Mean Party Time for Gold
Gold prices broke through $1,200 and stayed up just as it became clear the market wasn't just going through a year-change hiccup. What gives – and will it keep on giving?
Gold prices broke through $1,200 and stayed up just as it became clear the market wasn't just going through a year-change hiccup. What gives – and will it keep on giving?
When is a having a lot more cash a bad thing? When it artificially props up the economy instead of fixing dangerous weaknesses in our system.
Want to relive the nightmare of 2008? Here's how we're re-tracing the path to disaster.
Was the recent spike in gold prices a fluke or the shape of things to come?
Remember 2008? As Chinese banks and the U.S. oil and gas industry both get set to implode we'll be living the financial nightmare again in 2016.
As the year stops being new, markets worldwide are still roiling, oil's crash is taking jobs with it – and with China ever-shakier, hopes for any good news in 2016 are fading.
Chinese business owes more to their banks than the value of the entire Chinese economy. What happens when it all comes crashing down?
The malaise was evident even in the holiday month of December – and it turns out that nagging feeling was right. U.S. economic growth virtually ground to a halt, and 2016 is shaping up to be even more sluggish.
When speed is the name of the game in trading stocks he who has the most machines wins. But how much do you lose?
January's stock market saw trillions of dollars in equities vaporized. As bad as that was for your 401(k), the trajectory it marks out for the rest of 2016 is worse.