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Kudlow: Bernanke and Ethanol Subsidies Sink Egypt

Fleckenstein: Bond market may signal U.S. financial crisis to come

By Bill Fleckenstein
MSN Money

Just before Thanksgiving, I held a contest for readers of my website, fleckensteincapital.com (subscription required), challenging them to provide the best definition for the term “funding crisis,” a potential problem I have worried about since early 2009 — and a consequence of bailing out the financial system.
Bing

How to invest in bonds
I am becoming more convinced that the various elements of a funding crisis will be picking up the pace and intensity sooner, rather than later, and they may well be the most important factors to consider with regard to investment decisions in 2011.

Before delving deeper into this topic, I would like to share a slightly trimmed-down version of the winning reader’s submission:

“A funding crisis refers to the inability of a country to finance itself without resorting to outright money-printing. This can lead to a vicious cycle of currency depreciation, rising interest rates, poor economic performance and poor investor sentiment, all of which feed on each other in a downward spiral.

A funding crisis can end when proper monetary and fiscal discipline is restored, usually at the expense of severe economic hardship.”

I have been using the term “funding crisis” regularly since the fall of 2008, and I penned the following definition in May 2009:

“If the dollar is called into question . . . and if the Fed’s monetization cannot lower rates (and in fact causes them to rise, due to the consequences of money printing), then the Fed is trapped. The more it tries to solve the problem with money printing, the worse it all becomes.”

Not to labor excessively over defining terms, but I think it is critical for investors to be able to identify the signs of a funding crisis.

Get full story here.

Pento: Bernanke’s 2 Big Lies in 60 Minutes

Bernanke: 60 Minutes, 2 Big Lies
By Michael Pento

This past Sunday on the CBS program “60 Minutes”, Americans received a massive dose of mendacity from our Fed Chairman. Mr. Bernanke’s shaky delivery, and even shakier logic may cause faith in America’s economic leadership to evaporate faster than the value of our dollar. In particular, Bernanke delivered two massive distortions:

Lie #1 – The Fed isn’t printing money.

Lie #2- Bernanke is “100 % confident” that, when necessary, the Fed can control inflation and reverse its accommodative monetary policy.

Get full story here.

Inside the Dome: December 8th, 2010

December 8th, 2010, Washington, DC–From ALG News’ Capitol Hill Correspondent Rick Manning:

The tax cut compromise has gotten a chilly response for House Democrats, and appears to have some significant problems in the Senate as well. Senator Jim DeMint’s concerns that the additional unemployment insurance extension is not paid for as well as the resurrection of the death tax are sure to be talking points among conservatives and fiscal hawks, and outgoing Senator George Voinovich supports allowing taxes to skyrocket when the ball drops in Times Square.

Obama’s emergency press conference revealed a President who clings to the campaign, “back of the bus drinking a slurpee” rhetoric, equating Republicans who don’t roll over to suit his political whims as “hostage takers”. Not exactly language that will create a positive working relationship in the upcoming two years with the House Republican majority.

Ultimately, for all the squawking in the House by the outgoing Speaker and her minions, they will do a deal because they have no power in January. It is likely that Harry Reid and Mitch McConnell cobble together 60 votes, with both knowing that this will be a preview of the next two years as Republicans try to impose some fiscal sanity on Washington. Read the rest of this entry »

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