‘Death of gold’ greatly exaggerated Vital context: gold rose sharply in years preceding crisis and during crisis Important to consider gold in local currency terms In euro, gold is up 2% in 2015, after 13% gain in 2014 Gold at

At a Wednesday meeting last week, the Federal Reserve left key interest rates unchanged and near zero, which means that the low-rate regime that began at least six years ago has been extended yet again. However, various mainstream media reports

We are joined by Professor Steve Keen, author of Debunking Economics, to discuss the problem of household debt and an overly large finance sector. They discuss possible solutions, such as perhaps ending the practice of subsidizing too-big-to-fail banks…

As technology generally continues to advance, one thing you can be sure of is the criminal justice system’s use of innovative new “tools” will grow exponentially. This can be a good thing, but it can also be a very dangerous thing. Pennsylvania’s new

Here is the conventional narrative about rents and housing valuations: 1. Rents have soared because people can’t afford to buy a house and have to rent 2. Based on soaring rents, housing is fairly valued In other words, rents and

The headlines are dramatic, ugly and depressing to anyone who holds gold right now. Broad market sentiment has shifted from disdain and dismissive to highly negative. Hedge funds are shorting gold aggressively, hedge funds that own gold are being “outed”.

There’s nothing quite like a grotesquely lopsided “economic recovery” in which a handful of cities boom, while the rest of the nation stagnates. Even worse, millennials living in such chosen cities face one of two options. Either live in mom and dad’s basement, or

Watch Senator Bernie Sanders (D. Vermont), candidate for the Democratic nomination for the 2016 U.S. presidential election, interview Nomi Prins, frequent Keiser Report guest and author of It Takes a Pillage and All the Presidents’ Bankers. The interview is as

George Galloway wants bitcoin tech to bring transparency to London’s spending