Sentences with phrase «times of financial collapse»

When you trade binary options, it actually gives you a big advantage because it works when the market is rising in boom times and falling in times of financial collapse.
When you trade binary options, it actually gives you a big advantage because it works when the market is rising in boom times and falling in times of financial collapse.

Not exact matches

It is anomalous to see financial journalists talk about the futility of market timing in the stock market but then give the impression houses should be sold to avoid an anticipated collapse in prices.
New York Times columnist Paul Krugman goes so far as to raise the spectre of the Depression - era financial policies that led to the collapse of the Weimar Republic — and the Second World War.
(Reuters)- Britain's revenue collector is preparing to abort its plans to tax Bitcoin trading only days after the currency's leading exchange, Mt Gox, collapsed after losing almost $ 500 million of customer deposits to hackers, the Financial Times reported.
At the time, the troika was credited with saving the world's financial markets from collapse and slowing the spread of the «Asian Contagion,» a wave of financial market panic that began with the rapid devaluation of Thailand's currency and spread to other parts of Asia, Russia and Latin America, soon affecting the real economy as well.
Circling back to the mall / REIT ticking time - bomb, while the Fed can keep the stock market propped up as means of preventing an immediate nuclear melt - down in U.S. pensions (all of which are substantially «maxed - out» in their mandated equities allocation), the collapse of commercial mortgage - back securities (CMBS) will have the affect of launching a nuclear sub-missile directly into the side of the U.S. financial system.
For the first time, the Bank of Canada added a home - price correction in Toronto, Vancouver or both to its list of four main financial risks, replacing the threat of a collapse in commodity prices, which was dropped.
The quote above embodies two of the concepts I've been discussing for quite some time in the weekly Short Seller's Journals: Central Bank intervention will ultimately fail in spectacular fashion; the Too Big To Fail Banks (TBTFs) currently have more leverage and OTC derivatives — the latter well hidden off - balance - sheet — than just before the 2008 financial crisis / de facto collapse.
Yacktman said there's 3 opportune times to buy: when the whole market goes down / collapses (like the financial crisis of 2008), an industry shortfall (like 1993 with concerns of changing the healthcare industry), or an individual stock temporarily out of favor.
With massive and increasing structural deficits; exploding debt in all sectors; hostile demographics; social and political fracturing and disintegration; grotesque wealth inequality; extraordinary global trade competition; a complete collapse of respect for vital government organizations such as the Justice Department and FBI, which the people now realize have gone rogue; an extremely complex and corrosive global geopolitical environment; the real prospect of war, potentially nuclear and worldwide; not to mention numerous additional factors, we can only point to few other times in history more dangerous to the people's financial welfare, and therefore more overall bullish for gold, one of the only financial sanctuaries proven to work in times of dislocation.
The cost of insurance against defaults by European banks reached an all - time record for that reason last Friday, and banks stopped lending to each other on the interbank market «portending an imminent collapse of the financial system.
The truth is that there are difficult times ahead, that Britain's post war pattern of ever rising living standards has been broken by the financial collapse.
It was both a time of new freedom from bureaucracy and rapid financial decay created by the collapsed Soviet economy which plunged the Russian scientific institutions into poverty.
The Big Short, Adam McKay's 2015 financial lecture masquerading as a high - profile comedy pitting banking snobs versus investor slobs, spent much of its run time warning people away from the sorts of behaviors that led to the banking collapse of the mid-2000s.
NPR's Linda Wertheimer talks with TIME magazine's Michael Grunwald about the winding down of government recovery efforts following the financial collapse of 2008.
The bubble was a combination of (a) teaser rates on option ARMs which were like financial time bombs, (b) liar loans in which the rules of good mortgage underwriting (20 % down, 28/36 ratios) went out the window, (C) people at rating agencies who decided that if one pools enough junk loans into one bond, it's magically AAA, and (D) Credit default swaps which encouraged these bad loans, and when they collapsed a number of people walked away with billions of dollars.
Fundamentally, Margin debt has a history of peaking right before financial collapses this seems like a warning to me but everyone say it's different this time.
Albertans in particular have been hit the hardest with commodities, oil and gas stocks collapsing to 2008 financial crisis levels, real estate prices stagnating while the rest of the country tests new all - time highs, and now two impending tax increases thanks to those voting for change in the provincial and federal elections.
That city may be undergoing the largest municipal bankruptcy in U.S. history, but unlike when the big banks and giant financial outfits teetered at the edge of collapse, President Obama has made it clear that this time there will be no billion - dollar federal bailout.
The overall aim is to preserve financial stability even in times of crisis while making it unnecessary to use billions of taxpayer money to rescue so called «systemically important» banks — banks whose collapse would put a serious threat to financial market stability.
Michael advised the Bank of England throughout the banking crisis, including on its Special Liquidity Scheme (for which his team won the 2009 Financial Times Innovative Lawyers Award for Legal Innovation in the Credit Crisis and the Downturn), the collapse of Lehman Brothers, Bradford & Bingley and the Icelandic banks, and the recapitalisation of UK banks.
From recent regulatory enforcement priorities such as insider trading, high - frequency trading, financial crisis investigations, the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act (FCPA), Bank Secrecy Act / AML violations, accounting fraud, and hedge fund collapses to some of the most significant matters over the last decade, such as auction rate securities, market timing, RMBS, LIBOR, FX, late trading, IPO allocation, and Wall Street research, our securities enforcement and white collar defense lawyers have been at the center of every major initiative affecting the financial services sector.
Some of the biggest financial institutions of the time were awarding customers with recklessly faulty home loans, resulting in their eventual collapse, which led to the crash we all remember so well.
«Built for a post-trust world, Bitreserve's real - time transparency system eliminates the opportunities for fraud and destructive risk - taking that have caused the collapse of banks and other financial institutions throughout history,» the startup's website reads.
Fewer Americans employed full or part time are worried about their job security or compensation than has been true since the financial collapse of late 2008.
The conviction of Allen and TBW's former chairman, Lee Farkas, who still awaits sentencing on June 27, are considered to be some of the highest profile executives in the housing and financial industries to receive prison time in the aftermath of the housing market collapse, the Washington Post notes.
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