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Max is Golden

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  • Max is Golden


  • #2
    Re: Max is Golden

    He Promised me a "Thing of Beauty" (£ Collape) last April!

    Mike

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    • #3
      Re: Max is Golden

      Lots of "No, Max" from Denninger

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      • #4
        Re: Max is Golden

        Originally posted by Mega View Post
        He Promised me a "Thing of Beauty" (£ Collape) last April!

        Mike
        It did collapse. Look at how much less oil you can by with the £ compared to last April...;)

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        • #5
          Re: Max is Golden

          from Jesse's Cafe Amercain....

          24 February 2010

          Keiser Report №19: Markets! Finance! Scandal! - And Karl Denninger




          Although I don't always agree with them, obviously, I am always interested, informed, and entertained by what madcap Max Keiser and his cerebral colleague Stacy Herbert have to say on The Keiser Report. As you may know, Max is the latest American in Paris, having left the States after selling his Hollywood Stock Exchange to Cantor Fitzgerald of Wall Street. Perhaps some day we can have a drink at the Ritz and philosophize, as expatriates are often wont to do, about the tragic transience of empire. The Ritz. Alas, when I was a visiting student at ESSEC I could not afford it, and now that I can, I do not get out much anymore. But who can tell what the future may bring.

          The most recent broadcast of the Keiser Report has an added attraction in its second half, Karl Denninger. Karl is probably more familiar to our American patrons as the outre financial commentator from The Market Ticker.

          Karl always has something interesting to say, spoken plainly, and without the kind of courtly manner towards corporate America that is so fashionable among the journalists in the mainstream media who are members of the Wall Street demimonde.

          Mr. Denninger is particularly effective, when he gets it right as he frequently does, in describing complex transactions because he is not an economist or a financial professional, but a computer engineer, an honest technical sort, who brings some formidable analytical skills to a relatively unfamiliar subject. He often gets 'nit-picked' by the pros who play word games with their jargon, but more often than not he is directionally correct.

          And he occasionally admits it when he is wrong, and changes tack, a refreshing trait amongst the greater universe of financial commentators.

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