Leadership Failings Threaten Markets

We’re only a few weeks from the next Federal Budget and already the omens are not good. Due to the slump in commodity prices, and ongoing general weakness in the economy, we know that the Budget will contain another confidence jarring write down in government revenues. Prime Minister Tony Abbott this past week hinted the loss could be around $30 billion over the four year forward estimate period.

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Deflation Fears Over Inflated

With global equity markets continuing to rise, more and more investors are starting to fret that the party might be about to end sometime soon. As the saying goes, however, equity prices tend to climb a “wall of worry” – as long as there’s at least a vocal minority worrying about the market, chances are that prices will keep moving higher.

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Investors Need to Be Wary of Crowds

The trend is your friend in financial markets, but investors also need to be wary when a strong consensus emerges on the likely price direction in any one market. To my mind, bond yields and share prices now seem most vulnerable to a shift in currently consensus bullish sentiment, though this may well entrench the other consensus trade of selling the Australian dollar and gold.

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Why The RBA Is Wrong About House Prices

If we’re not careful the nervous nellies that continually worry about Australian house prices risk talking the economy into an even more serious downturn. In repeated public speeches in recent weeks, Reserve Bank officials have hinted that – along with ASIC – it is considering imposing credit lending controls for investors, especially in Sydney and Melbourne.

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Bassanese: Remain Bearish Gold

Gold prices had a long a glorious run during the commodity price upswing and then during the early stages of global economic recovery from the 2008 financial crisis. But along with the commodity prices and the Australian dollar more broadly, gold prices peaked around mid-2011, and it has largely been one-way traffic downward ever since.

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