Post by 3bid on Oct 27, 2019 14:24:37 GMT -5
Keiser Report: Money burning unicorns & shale slowdown
Published on Oct 31, 2019
In this episode of the Keiser Report, Max and Stacy discuss the ‘not-com’ bubble (as dubbed by Derek Thompson in The Atlantic). As VCs lose their shirts on their money-burning unicorns, it is the retail investor showing much more sobriety and refusing to get swept up by the ‘acute fever’ in private markets. In the second half, Max continues his conversation with Dmitry Orlov of Club Orlov about his views on the protests erupting around the world and his thoughts on central banks engineering negative interest rates and what it means for the future of the global economy.
Keiser Report: So Sleepy
Published on Oct 29, 2019
In this episode of the Keiser Report, Max and Stacy discuss a BBC journalist who visited rural Ohio to see what voters thought about the situation in Syria. Almost all of them said that they were too busy working multiple jobs and ‘too sleepy to concentrate.’ This reminds Stacy of the story of Warren Buffett calling then Treasury Secretary Hank Paulson in the middle of the night, during the 2008 financial crisis, to convince him to inject $250 billion directly into the banks. Paulson recalled that he was so sleepy he thought ‘Warren’ was his mother’s gardener. He got the bailout. In the second half, Max talks to Dmitry Orlov of Club Orlov about his views on anti-Russia hysteria and whether or not China will surpass the US as an economic power. Orlov believes China’s economic policy is what he calls ‘Stalinism 2.0.’
Keiser Report: Commerce with all nations
Published on Oct 26, 2019
In this episode of the Keiser Report, Max and Stacy discuss the battle between old principles and new and ask what Thomas Jefferson meant when he wrote that “Money, not morality, is the principle commerce of civilized nations.” And is Angela Merkel right to think first of her domestic manufacturers? What, also, does it mean that China now has more millionaires than America?
In the second half, Max talks to Dan Collins, a businessman and investor who lived in China for twenty years before moving back to the USA this year. They discuss the NBA, Huawei, COSCO and Tesla’s Gigafactory in Shanghai.
Published on Oct 31, 2019
In this episode of the Keiser Report, Max and Stacy discuss the ‘not-com’ bubble (as dubbed by Derek Thompson in The Atlantic). As VCs lose their shirts on their money-burning unicorns, it is the retail investor showing much more sobriety and refusing to get swept up by the ‘acute fever’ in private markets. In the second half, Max continues his conversation with Dmitry Orlov of Club Orlov about his views on the protests erupting around the world and his thoughts on central banks engineering negative interest rates and what it means for the future of the global economy.
Keiser Report: So Sleepy
Published on Oct 29, 2019
In this episode of the Keiser Report, Max and Stacy discuss a BBC journalist who visited rural Ohio to see what voters thought about the situation in Syria. Almost all of them said that they were too busy working multiple jobs and ‘too sleepy to concentrate.’ This reminds Stacy of the story of Warren Buffett calling then Treasury Secretary Hank Paulson in the middle of the night, during the 2008 financial crisis, to convince him to inject $250 billion directly into the banks. Paulson recalled that he was so sleepy he thought ‘Warren’ was his mother’s gardener. He got the bailout. In the second half, Max talks to Dmitry Orlov of Club Orlov about his views on anti-Russia hysteria and whether or not China will surpass the US as an economic power. Orlov believes China’s economic policy is what he calls ‘Stalinism 2.0.’
Keiser Report: Commerce with all nations
Published on Oct 26, 2019
In this episode of the Keiser Report, Max and Stacy discuss the battle between old principles and new and ask what Thomas Jefferson meant when he wrote that “Money, not morality, is the principle commerce of civilized nations.” And is Angela Merkel right to think first of her domestic manufacturers? What, also, does it mean that China now has more millionaires than America?
In the second half, Max talks to Dan Collins, a businessman and investor who lived in China for twenty years before moving back to the USA this year. They discuss the NBA, Huawei, COSCO and Tesla’s Gigafactory in Shanghai.