Elliott Wave InternationalmyEWISocioniomics.Net

What to Expect During the Coming Debt Collapse
Entire nations will likely default, learn what to do now

By Bob Stokes
7/10/2012 3:30:00 PM

Most of us can grasp how individuals, companies and even municipalities can go bankrupt. It's less easy to conceive how a nation can default on its obligations. But history proves that nation's can default on their debt. Learn what Elliott Wave International expects next...     

Filed Under: conquer the crash, credit crisis, debt crisis, debt downgrade, deficit, deflation, economic depression, economic indicators, Elliott Wave Theorist, great depression, Greek debt, history, junk bonds, municipal bonds, soverign debt crisis, U.S. Treasuries

Category: U.S. Economy


Will Europe's Economic Wildfire Finally Be Contained?
Inside our new, July 2012 European Financial Forecast...

By Nico Isaac
6/29/2012 6:00:00 PM

The raging inferno of soaring bond yields and plunging stock markets has been spreading across Europe, jumping from Greece to Portugal to Spain to Italy. But according to the mainstream experts, there is one way to snuff out the flames: fly rescue planes over the blaze and dump emergency lending, low interest rates, and monetary policy from the skies above. And from the ashes, new growth will emerge. So, are they right?

 

Filed Under: AEX, Bank of England, CAC40, central banks, DAX, debt crisis, debt downgrade, diversification, Elliott wave, eu, euro, euro stoxx 50, euro/USD exchange rate, europe, european central bank, European debt crisis, european markets, European Union (EU), eurozone, FTSE, inflation, International Monetary Fund (IMF), Swiss Market Index (SMI)

Category: European Markets


United States Debt: A Stack of $100 Bills 10,712 Miles High
Evidence that the very high stack is crashing back to earth

By Bob Stokes
6/29/2012 5:00:00 PM

The national debt clock shows that the United States debt stands near $15,820,142,000,000 – as in almost $16 trillion. U.S. total debt is much higher: $56,922,000,000,000. That much debt is unsustainable. And, as Elliott Wave International sees it, there's only one way out...

Filed Under: credit crisis, debt crisis, debt downgrade, deflation, Elliott wave, Sovereign Debt

Category: U.S. Economy


World's 15 Biggest Banks Get Downgraded -- What This Means for "Safe Banks"
Another one of Robert Prechter's Conquer the Crash forecasts comes true

By Vadim Pokhlebkin
6/28/2012 6:00:00 PM

This seems like a good moment for those "safe-haven" banks to toot their horn a little, as it might just get them more business -- just as this quote from Ch. 19 of Robert Prechter's Conquer the Crash had predicted...

Filed Under: debt downgrade, deflation, diversification, Elliott wave, risk management, Robert Prechter, safe banks, safe haven

Category: Classic Prechter


Europe's Financial Fiasco: Migrating to the United States?
History may repeat itself

By Bob Stokes
5/29/2012 4:00:00 PM

About a year before the October 1929 crash, net capital inflows fell in several European countries. In other words: European economies began to deteriorate before the Great Depression began in the U.S. Is history repeating itself?...

Filed Under: 1929 Stock Market Crash, Bank of Japan, bloomberg, credit crisis, credit default swaps, debt ceiling, debt downgrade, deflation, Elliott wave, European debt crisis, european markets, European Union (EU), eurozone, financial forecast, great depression, Greek debt, housing prices, recession, Robert Prechter, S&P 500, Shanghai Composite Index, soverign debt crisis

Category: Global Markets


Position Yourself for the Rest of "Conquer the Crash"
The earlier you prepare, the better

By Bob Stokes
5/17/2012 5:30:00 PM

To this day, I wonder why Robert Prechter's book Conquer the Crash has not been more widely recognized. It described in advance much of what happened in the 2008 financial crisis. Learn what Prechter is saying now...

Filed Under: banks, Bob Prechter, conquer the crash, debt crisis, debt downgrade, deflation, economic depression, Elliott Wave Theorist, Greek debt, market crash, market forecasts

Category: U.S. Economy


Bank Capital Rules: A Reminder of 2008
"In 2008 there was a credit crisis. The next five years will bring on the credit crisis."

By Bob Stokes
5/10/2012 5:00:00 PM

Is our financial system stronger today than it was four years ago? Most people might think so; mainstream news analysis rarely suggests otherwise. But here's what the public remains mostly in the dark about...

Filed Under: banks, central banks, conquer the crash, credit rating, debt crisis, debt downgrade, deflation, economic depression, Elliott wave, european central bank, European debt crisis, hedge funds, U.S. Federal Reserve (the Fed)

Category: U.S. Economy


The Spain Downgrade and Contagion: Just How Much Risk?
Has the threat ratcheted up a notch (or two)?

By Bob Stokes
4/27/2012 4:00:00 PM

Shortly after the fourteenth European debt crisis summit concluded and there was an "extraordinary shift from negativity to optimism," the November 2011 Global Market Perspective flatly said "The current level of unpayable debt is too big to bail." Yet financial journalists and many of the economists they interview have been busy talking about rising markets and recovering economies. Some were even saying that Europe's debt crisis was "under control." It seems not...

Filed Under: debt downgrade, European debt crisis, european markets, European Union (EU), eurozone, Greek debt, International Monetary Fund (IMF), Short Term Update, soverign debt crisis

Category: European Markets


How to Handle an Economic Implosion
There are ways to prepare for deflation

By Bob Stokes
4/10/2012 3:45:00 PM

You can't do much as an individual to solve the nation's debt and economic problems, yet you can prepare for a worsening economic downtrend. Do we see evidence for an economic turn for the worse? Well, the evidence is so overwhelming that...

Filed Under: conquer the crash, debt crisis, debt downgrade, deflation, economic depression, great depression, history, safe banks

Category: U.S. Economy


If the Economy's "Recovering," Why is the Largest-Ever U.S. City Facing Bankruptcy?
What's really going on?

By Bob Stokes
3/5/2012 5:00:00 PM

As pundits chatter about an economic recovery, municipalities are facing bankruptcy - including the largest-ever U.S. city. What's really going on?...

Filed Under: credit rating, debt downgrade, economic depression, foreclosures, home sales, junk bonds, municipal bonds

Category: U.S. Economy


European Stocks: BIG Picture, Plus "An Ideal Set-Up"
Inside EWI's March 2012 European Financial Forecast...

By Vadim Pokhlebkin
3/4/2012 11:45:00 AM

When you look at a long-term chart of Europe's four main stock indexes --- the DAX, FTSE-100, CAC-40 and EuroStoxx 50 -- you notice one striking detail: Since at least 2000, every prolonged stock market rally turned out to be a set-up for another devastating crash. This fact is obvious when you glance at the opening chart of EWI's new, March 2012 European Financial Forecast. Of course, European stocks have rallied strongly off their 2009 lows, too. What should you make of this?

Filed Under: AEX, Bank of England, debt crisis, debt downgrade, economic depression, Elliott wave, euro, euro stoxx 50, europe, european central bank, European debt crisis, european markets, European Union (EU), eurozone, Greek debt, investment decisions, Swiss Market Index (SMI), technical analysis, technical indicators

Category: European Markets


Who Downgraded France before S&P Did?
Discover how rating agencies simply endorse the judgments that stock markets make

By Nathaniel Williams
1/24/2012 2:00:00 PM

After Standard & Poor's downgraded France on Jan. 13, 2012, some analysts were shocked -- while others fiercely criticized the move. But is it S&P they should be mad at?

Filed Under: debt downgrade, europe, European debt crisis, european markets

Category: European Markets


A Not-So-Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Economic Recovery
If this is what a "recovery" looks like, imagine the "economic reversal"

By Bob Stokes
12/15/2011 5:30:00 PM

After reading this, you may wonder how healthy the "economic recovery" really is...

Filed Under: banks, debt downgrade, deflation, Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC), Interest Rates, monetary policy, U.S. Federal Reserve (the Fed)

Category: U.S. Economy


America's Biggest Banks: How Safe Are They?
"The Coming Worldwide Bank run"

By Bob Stokes
11/30/2011 4:30:00 PM

Fifteen major U.S. and European banks were just downgraded by Standard & Poor's. Please consider this insightful excerpt from a recent Elliott Wave Theorist titled, "The Coming Worldwide Bank run"...

Filed Under: bailouts, central banks, Club EWI, credit crisis, debt downgrade, european central bank, European debt crisis, liquidity, Robert Prechter, soverign debt crisis, stimulus package

Category: U.S. Economy


Credit Crisis Defaults: Will Rating Services Warn You in Time?
In the past, the rating services have been "woefully late"

By Bob Stokes
11/15/2011 5:15:00 PM

A big bet on European sovereign debt was the undoing of MF Global. Our latest Financial Forecast says "...Europe is the epicenter of the credit crisis," and observes that "The current level of unpayable debt is too big to bail." It's reasonable to believe that many more financial shoes will drop. What do we see just ahead?...

Filed Under: bailouts, conquer the crash, credit crisis, credit default swaps, credit rating, debt crisis, debt downgrade, economic depression, European debt crisis, European Union (EU), eurozone, Robert Prechter, soverign debt crisis

Category: U.S. Economy


The Hidden Risk on a “Hedged Position”
How the International Swaps Dealer Association crippled the sovereign bond credit default swaps market -- and why that matters to you

By Jason Farkas
11/10/2011 2:00:00 PM

Jefferies & Co, Inc. just announced that they have reduced their holdings of European sovereign debt by $2.2 billion. But just last week -- and for months prior – many holders of European debt declared themselves to be “hedged” against any risks via credit default swaps (CDS). Here's what might be happening...

Filed Under: debt crisis, debt downgrade, derivatives, European debt crisis, European Union (EU), eurozone, Greek debt

Category: European Markets


Debt and Default: Are More Financial Dominoes About to Fall?
Is the financial game almost up?

By Bob Stokes
11/8/2011 5:30:00 PM

The latest Financial Forecast states: "While Europe is the epicenter of the credit crisis, the situation in the U.S. is hurtling toward the same type of abyss..." The recently published issue goes on to reveal the thought-provoking analysis behind that statement...

Filed Under: conquer the crash, credit crisis, credit rating, debt crisis, debt downgrade, Greek debt, soverign debt crisis

Category: U.S. Economy


Europe: Here's How to Stay AHEAD of the News That Changes by the Hour
Inside EWI's November 2011 European Financial Forecast...

By Vadim Pokhlebkin
11/4/2011 6:00:00 PM

In times of uncertainty -- when emotions run high and no one knows what will happen next -- the mainstream financial community is usually gripped by confusion and panic. And yet it's precisely at these sorts of "flash crash" moments that Elliott wave analysis shines, as wave patterns in price charts become clear. Why?

Filed Under: debt crisis, debt downgrade, economic depression, Elliott wave, European Union (EU), euro, euro stoxx 50, eurozone, euro/USD exchange rate, europe, european central bank, European debt crisis, European Union (EU), eurozone, Greek debt

Category: European Markets


Want to Anticipate What's Next for Stocks? Begin HERE
See what subscribers read hours before S&P announced the debt downgrade

By Robert Folsom
8/9/2011 2:00:00 PM

The media made it sound like the stock market was down when it looked like no budget deal would happen, but then prices fell even further when a deal did happen...

Filed Under: Elliott wave, debt downgrade

Category: Stocks


Dow Plummets Below 11,000 - Prepare for the Next Move
Learn how to keep ahead of the markets with knowledge of the Elliott Wave Principle

By Jill Noble
8/9/2011 1:45:00 PM

Don't waste a crisis - take this opportunity to study the past -- with Robert Prechter -- as the market's current trend continues to unfold.

Filed Under: debt crisis, debt downgrade, Elliott Wave Principle, Robert Prechter

Category: U.S. Economy


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The Elliott Wave Principle is a detailed description of how financial markets behave. The description reveals that mass psychology swings from pessimism to optimism and back in a natural sequence, creating specific Elliott wave patterns in price movements. Each pattern has implications regarding the position of the market within its overall progression, past, present and future. The purpose of Elliott Wave International’s market-oriented publications is to outline the progress of markets in terms of the Wave Principle and to educate interested parties in the successful application of the Wave Principle. While a course of conduct regarding investments can be formulated from such application of the Wave Principle, at no time will Elliott Wave International make specific recommendations for any specific person, and at no time may a reader, caller or viewer be justified in inferring that any such advice is intended. Investing carries risk of losses, and trading futures or options is especially risky because these instruments are highly leveraged, and traders can lose more than their initial margin funds. Information provided by Elliott Wave International is expressed in good faith, but it is not guaranteed. The market service that never makes mistakes does not exist. Long-term success trading or investing in the markets demands recognition of the fact that error and uncertainty are part of any effort to assess future probabilities. Please ask your broker or your advisor to explain all risks to you before making any trading and investing decisions.