Now that Bob Chapman is gone, whose information do you trust?
Submitted by Mark9989 on Sat, 06/30/2012 - 07:53Now that Bob is gone ( RIP ), I was wondering whose information do you trust the most? Yeah, yeah, never trust anyone entirely, but if I had to weigh trust on a percentage basis, Bob was number one for me.
I heard him mention he likes John Williams and I've been paying him some attention. Maybe I'll get brave and ask the Zerohedge crowd also.
Anyways, I'm looking for more economics and financial information similar to Bob's.
Any suggestions?
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I go to
The dailywealth.com ive never seen them.be wrong. I remember when the predicted abig bank was going to.crash months before anyone know. And it did, on july 2008. And also.around march 2008, they predicted oil would crash to.at least $50 per barrel. Its more like an investment newsletter
Check Out The Daily Reckoning
http://dailyreckoning.com/
They have a good number of interesting writers and authors. My personal favorites being Bill Bonner (one of the founders) and Richard Daughty (Mogambo Guru). A number of LvMI fellows contribute on occasion.
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Got to tell you one thing
If you expect the freedom
That you say is yours
Prove that you deserve it
Help us to preserve it
Or being free will just be
Words and nothing more
~Kansas
For me
I bounce around on ZeroHedge, SilverDoctors and a few other sites like that. Max has his moments of Truth, more so than you'll see on CNBC or MSNBC (gag). I try and run with the general approach of more data inputs from different sources = better. Allows me to look for the patterns, and separate what looks to be wheat from the chaff.
Good Question! Max Keiser?
Good Question! Max Keiser?
with a spoon
Gag me. Max "Crash JP Morgan" Kaiser?
Ĵīɣȩ Ɖåđşŏń
"Fully half the quotations found on the internet are either mis-attributed, or outright fabrications." - Abraham Lincoln
"JPMorgan likely to post $4 billion to $6 billion trade loss"
Reuters, Thursday June 28 2012
By David Henry
NEW YORK (Reuters) - JPMorgan Chase & Co's losses from disastrous derivatives trades will likely amount to $4 billion (2.57 billion pounds) to $6 billion in the second quarter, far more than the original estimate... ...losses could reach $8 billion to $9 billion, assuming worst-case conditions.
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I barely know what derivitives are, but I do understand that money is fungible and somebody has hurt Chase, via contracts, to the tune of at least $4 billion. YAAAY.
"Timid men prefer the calm of despotism to the tempestuous sea of liberty" TJ