Long Term
Call it the new “Paranormal” market–you’ll need new tools to navigate it but the profit is out there
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...A two-part best 10 stock picks list for 2012–a very tough year to navigate
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...Lemons into lemonade: High yield stocks from today’s market rout for tomorrow’s retirement portfolio
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...
10 picks for growth in a low/no growth global economy–and they’re sure cheaper than they were a week ago
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...
A credit rating downgrade for the U.S. is still in the cards
Moody’s is the second credit rating company to say that the debt ceiling deal hasn’t removed concerns about the U.S. financial picture that could lead to a downgrade. Fitch Ratings said yesterday that it is keeping the U.S. credit rating under review.
China beyond 2012: Can it escape the slowdown called the middle income trap?
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...Getting ready for the end of the Fed’s stimulus–it’s not too early
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...Durable goods orders numbers are better than they look
Business investment remained encouragingly strong with orders for non-defense capital goods—excluding aircraft—climbing by 1.4% in December after increasing by 3.1% in November. Why “excluding aircraft”? Because there seems to be something wrong with the seasonal adjustments to aircraft orders.

My picks for the five best stock markets to overweight in 2011
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...
The big uncertainty for the year ahead? China’s real estate bubble
Real estate prices in China are rising at an unsustainable rate but the bursting of a real estate bubble in China would claim very different victims and to very different degrees than the bursting of the U.S. bubble did.
The Federal Reserve will hold its short-term interest rate target at 0% to 0.25% until 2012, according to a new research paper by economist Glenn Rudebusch.
That’s a much longer delay than Wall Street now anticipates. Estimates there for when the Federal Reserve will start to raise rates range from late this year to the first half of 2011.