Is confidence creeping (slowly) back into China’s stock markets?
Speculation that financial authorities will use next week’s Golden Week holiday, when stock markets in China are closed, to announce a new stimulus plan for the country’s financial markets does, in the short term, explain the rally today and for this week
One more bounce for Europe–and then the political realities can’t be ignored any longer
To subscribe to JAM you need to fill in some details below including, ahem, some info on how you'll pay us. A subscription is $199 (although if you're subscribing with one of our special offers it will be lower) for a year for ongoing and continuing access to the...My first read: The Spanish budget doesn’t add up, sorry.
To subscribe to JAM you need to fill in some details below including, ahem, some info on how you'll pay us. A subscription is $199 (although if you're subscribing with one of our special offers it will be lower) for a year for ongoing and continuing access to the...Spain’s budget announcement today moves the country closer to a program of unlimited bond buying by the ECB
The 2013 budget that Spain announced today was intended to send a message. And it looks like the U.S. market got it. What was the message? That a European Central Bank program of bond buying is on the way.
Buy Stillwater Mining on labor unrest in South Africa’s platinum mines
To subscribe to JAM you need to fill in some details below including, ahem, some info on how you'll pay us. A subscription is $199 (although if you're subscribing with one of our special offers it will be lower) for a year for ongoing and continuing access to the...South African strikes spread, shut down 39% of gold production
To subscribe to JAM you need to fill in some details below including, ahem, some info on how you'll pay us. A subscription is $199 (although if you're subscribing with one of our special offers it will be lower) for a year for ongoing and continuing access to the...EuroZone markets crumble on inaction in Spanish crisis
Thousands of Spaniards in the streets marching in protest. Yields on Spain’s 10-year bond back over 6%. The parliament building ringed by angry Spaniards. And still Spanish Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy says it’s still too soon to tell if Spain needs a bond-buying program from the European Central Bank.
It was an especially brutal sell off on September 25–if you owned the stocks that led the market in the rally
To subscribe to JAM you need to fill in some details below including, ahem, some info on how you'll pay us. A subscription is $199 (although if you're subscribing with one of our special offers it will be lower) for a year for ongoing and continuing access to the...Signs that Xylem will execute its growth plan in water treatment
To subscribe to JAM you need to fill in some details below including, ahem, some info on how you'll pay us. A subscription is $199 (although if you're subscribing with one of our special offers it will be lower) for a year for ongoing and continuing access to the...Spanish yields rise in today’s debt auction but will the country’s politicians wish that news away?
So how will Spanish politicians read this morning’s auction of three-month and six-month government debt? The Spanish Treasury met its goal for the auction by selling 4 billion euros in debt. The rates that Spain paid on this debt, however, were sharply higher. So complacency or call to action?