Latest Insights on BORR
Evergrande’s Debt Debacle; DoorDash On Tap; The Mattress Firm Manifesto
September 20, 2021 Great Stuff
China’s Monkey Wrench Hello, bankruptcy’s waited here for you … Evergrande. Today, the market’s torn itself in two. Deep in the red. Deep in the red, we trade. And Wall Street wonders if everything will ever be this real forever. If anything could ever be as good as the past 10 years again… The only […] Bonds Will Crash… but Stocks Can Still Soar
September 17, 2021 Trading Strategies, True Options Masters
Mike Carr explains how he can be bullish on stocks and bearish on bonds at the same time... and how to trade SPY and TLT to profit. Coinbase & The Chamber of SECrets, Oh No Nio & Typical Tesla Tirades
September 8, 2021 Great Stuff
If You Wanna Be My Lender You gotta get with the SEC’s lawyers … apparently. The market has had its share of soap opera theatrics over the years — remember when Great Stuff brought you Big Tech’s classic Antitrust Issues? And real OG Great Ones remember the long-running Tesla-driven plot of EV Days. (No? Just […] Boeing Catches Ryanair, Match Strikes Tinder & Terminator X It
September 7, 2021 Great Stuff
Boeing: Trade Me Deadly I went to a party last Saturday night. I didn’t get picks … got in a fight. Uh-huh … it ain’t no big thing. Ryanair killed an order; Boeing prices are bad. Can’t borrow ten bucks from your old man? Uh-huh … it ain’t no big thing. But I know what […] We’ll Pay You to Take Our Money
August 31, 2021 Big Picture. Big Profits., Economy, Investing
What if the Federal Reserve tried to give away money … and nobody wanted it?
That’s exactly what’s happening.
Last week, the stock market behaved as it always does in the run-up to a big Fed announcement.
Stocks traded sideways all week. Then on Friday, when Fed Chairman Jerome Powell said the central bank wasn’t going to be changing anything soon, everyone started buying again.
This is a familiar routine. It’s based on the assumption that the Fed has the power to raise or lower interest rates by buying bonds out of the market in exchange for cash injections.
But what if that assumption is wrong?