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USDX

Posted by redneckokie1 @ 21:25 on August 14, 2018  

Looks like 98.00 may be next stop. Those long gold, short USDX guys are getting their heads handed to them.

 

rno

Ororeef

Posted by goldielocks @ 20:19 on August 14, 2018  

The government is a part of these costs. They’ve got layers of fees like blood suckers attached to them. Users fees taxes all seperated, and more fees I can even remember depending on what state your from.

Verizon

Posted by Ororeef @ 19:06 on August 14, 2018  

fios   tried to scam me ..they delivered internet speed far below what I was led to believe I was getting ..Router not functioning properly then charged me rentals on devices I never got or were supposed to be free .Then when I told them how unhappy I was with them they agreed to give me credits and fix things ..that was two months ago ..The new system was installed at current speeds  and works fine ,but the credits are nowhere to be seen ..despite getting my son in Law to call them in addition to my self calling them  …He suggested he might could help ,( he’s been an executive at Major corporations like IBM,HP CompAssc..etc they give a lot of lip service ,but  credits never got here )..Im looking to get rid of them too at this point…Cable companies only know how to raise prices ..Fios tricks initial service customers by giving discounts at the inception and then they disappear and any changes you make start out the same ..everything starts out at a “discounted price” and after a year disappears giving them increases not just by increasing FEES ,raising Rates and the disappearing discounts….NOT getting the credits promised is the last straw   !

All I need is internet service ,I about to get rid of TV ..I already long ago got rid of telephone ridiculous fees and taxes by going to Ooma phone ..best thing ,I saved thousands already !

So That’s How It’s Going To Be, Vanguard? NO FRIEND of GOLD !

Posted by Ororeef @ 18:41 on August 14, 2018  

So That’s How It’s Going To Be, Vanguard?

Bob Moriarty
Archives

Aug 13, 2018

It looks like Vanguard, one of the world’s largest fund companies, is leaving gold investors up a certain creek without a paddle.

Starting next month, the $2.3 billion Vanguard Precious Metals and Mining Fund (VGPMX) will change not only its name and advisor but also its investment strategy. Its position in precious metals and mining stocks will be slashed, from at least 80 percent today to only 25 percent.

The firm’s July 27 press release doesn’t explain the reasoning behind the decision but I imagine it’s because VGPMX had a long history of inferior performance. The fund was unable to beat its benchmark for any period as of June 30.

Vanguard liked to call attention to the fund’s low fee structure—it charges only 0.36 percent—but like everything else in life, you often get what you pay for.

Walmart’s cheap, too, but I’m guessing you wouldn’t shop there to buy an outfit for an important job interview. You might not make the first impression you were hoping for.

Or how about McDonald’s? In the short-term, you might save some money eating every meal off its dollar menu, but because of the risks of high blood pressure and diabetes, you could be looking at higher medical expenses later on.

My point is that cheaper is not always better. In fact, cheaper often costs you more in the long run.

So instead of fixing VGPMX, Vanguard’s board threw in the towel. This leaves shareholders in the Vanguard ecosystem without a way to participate in an industry that, in the U.S., produced more than $75 billion in raw materials last year.

That’s bullshit, and investors deserve better, as I’ll show you in a moment.

Does This Mean Gold Has Found A Bottom?

There could be a silver lining here. Some analysts see Vanguard’s move as a further sign that the gold market has found a bottom—and that the metal could be teeing up for a reversal.

You see, this isn’t the first time Vanguard changed the fund. In 2001, when gold was similarly near a bottom, the company removed the word “Gold” from what was then the Vanguard Gold and Precious Metals Fund.

The change coincided with a decade-long precious metals bull run that saw gold rally from an average price of $271 an ounce in 2001 to an all-time high of more than $1,900 in September 2011. That’s more than a sevenfold increase.

And now it’s dropping the fund altogether.

(Click on images to enlarge)

So could this mean another gold bull run is in the works? No one can say for sure, of course, but the timing of Vanguard’s announcement is certainly interesting.

What I can say with certainty is that there are many investors—no doubt hundreds—who are in for a rude awakening when they find out their exposure to the metals and mining sector has inexplicably shrunk.

Seeking a Better Gold Fund

Now that Vanguard has decided to close VGPMX, it’s time for investors to look for not just “another,” but a better gold fund. A superior gold fund.

After doing some digging myself, I think an excellent option is U.S. Global Investors’ Gold and Precious Metals Fund (USERX), the very first no-load gold fund in the U.S.

USERX invests at least 80 percent of net assets in precious metals and mining companies. The top 10 holdings include growth-y, smaller-cap names like St. Barbara, Kirkland Lake and Wesdome Mines. You can also find precious metal royalty firms like Sandstorm Gold and Wheaton Precious Metals—both of which have among the highest revenues per employee of any company in the world.

This tells me the fund’s co-managers, U.S. Global CEO Frank Holmes and Ralph Aldis, have done their homework. And the homework appears to have paid off in spades.

For the one-year, three-year, five-year and 10-year periods as of July 31, USERX beat not only its benchmark, the FTSE Gold Mines Index, but also Vanguard’s $2.3 billion fund. For the three-year period, it outperformed VGPMX by more than 2,700 basis points, according to Bloomberg data.

Source: Bloomberg, U.S. Bancorp

The fund charges 1.66 percent, but I think it’s important to point out here that, with USERX, you’re paying for experience, expertise and—above all—performance.

The returns in the chart above? Yeah, they’re computed after fees. USERX is still the leader in every time period.

What’s more, USERX holds an amazing FIVE-STAR rating overall from Morningstar as of June 30 in the Equity Precious Metals category. It also holds five stars for the three-year and five-year periods, and four stars for the 10-year period.

Sound too good to be true? Check out the Gold and Precious Metals Fund (USERX) for yourself by clicking here!

###

Bob Moriarty
President: 321gold
Archives

321gold Ltd

Copyright ©2001-2018 321gold Ltd. All Rights Reserved

Today POG 1193.70

Posted by commish @ 17:39 on August 14, 2018  

illinformedlinedcrab

WPM 2nd quarter results

Posted by ipso facto @ 17:10 on August 14, 2018  

https://www.wheatonpm.com/news/pressreleases/News-Releases-Details/2018/Wheaton-Precious-Metals-Announces-Second-Quarter-Results-for-2018-and-Declares-Third-Quarterly-Dividend-of-2018/default.aspx

This interview with Steve Bannon has to be the best explanation of where we are, yet put out…..but even he ignores the Rig.

Posted by Maddog @ 16:11 on August 14, 2018  

http://nymag.com/daily/intelligencer/2018/08/steve-bannon-on-how-2008-planted-the-seed-for-the-trump-presidency.html

The US-Turkey Crisis: The NATO Alliance Forged In 1949 Is Today Largely Irrelevant

Posted by Maddog @ 16:08 on August 14, 2018  

https://www.zerohedge.com/news/2018-08-13/us-turkey-crisis-nato-alliance-forged-1949-today-largely-irrelevant

Just read this and considering the protagonists, there is no easy solution…so yet again it is the Rig that is at work, taking the SM etc up today, as if there wasn’t a care in the World.

Cash is King

Posted by Ororeef @ 14:32 on August 14, 2018  

and the borrowers shall die….The Us Banks make loans in Dollars to foreign country’s then interest rates rise making those loans carry a high er rate than those countrys can pay.So their loans get expensive to pay back.Then when they do pay back it takes MORE of local currency to pay the exchange rate difference making loans harder still to pay back .

Then trade negotiations are getting tougher causing  more job losses for them….So the free ride from the US is OVER and the Uncle Sam wants his due….Turkey ,Greece most of Europe wont repay loans..certainly not Africa and now MAYBE China or anybody else that BORROWED from US Banks or US DOLLARS abroad.Thats what Bankers do..they put you in debt ..then they raise rates AND Raise the value of the DOLLAR  making payback impossible.Then they foreclose…they confiscate your collateral ,your house,your business,your land…..Thats how Banking works ! Always have your debt in a weak currency,your assets in a strong currency .Most of the world financiers do the opposite.They should have hedged their loans by owning Gold with a PUT option for insurence…but they dont think like Bankers.Do not borrow for consumption  ever !Borrow to make money in your business only if its profitable…..

When is CASH KING ? ,  in a Depression  !You can buy assets  for 10 % of peak price…or even less.The US creates growth by developing the third world with debt ..We built China with loans ,we gave them jobs for their cheap labor ,now they need to PAY BACK ,same with TURKEY and Europe,Canada ,Mexico ….time to pay up !Theres NO free LUNCH…

Dont send us your poor anymore ,send us your smartest ,your educated thats the price you pay for your loans…..

US needs to reduce its debt !  pay up…..say the Banksters….The only way out is for the US to DEVALUE …!

Just no stopping the USD

Posted by Buygold @ 12:42 on August 14, 2018  

Killing pm’s and currencies around the world.

Ponzi World on BitCoin=”first mover advantage”

Posted by Richard640 @ 12:03 on August 14, 2018  
His main assertion is that a lot of money was made in the early days of Bitcoin and then a lot was lost in the past year. He calls this “first mover advantage” – just like those who cashed out of the Madoff fraud had first mover advantage. First mover advantage used to be an industrial term, but in today’s fucked up lexicon it’s applied to Ponzi schemes instead. Regardless, he’s only right on a relative percentage basis. On an overall absolute dollar basis and in terms of the number of people affected, very little was made in the early days, and half a trillion was wiped out in the past year. 
 
Below is the combined crypto market cap. Roughly~$20 billion in market cap was accrued during the first nine years of Bitcoin existence when it was a relative novelty. Once it became a mainstream fad, crypto bolted to $750 billion prior to crashing in a matter of months. The amount of money lost in the past year is orders of magnitude greater than the amount of money made during the first nine years. 
 
 
 
This is what Prechter explains over and over again, but relatively few people seem to understand. Markets are valued by the marginal transaction. Even if only one person sells, the value of ALL Bitcoins is reduced. The vast majority of money flowed into crypto during the past year, and most of it never made it out. It was merely “revalued”.  =

http://ponziworld.blogspot.com

Peter Paul and Mary’s new smash hit: “Where have all the tax cut dollars (repatriated) gone: long time passing”

Posted by Richard640 @ 11:58 on August 14, 2018  

Monday, August 13, 2018

Ponzi Meltdown In Real-Time

The lesson that wasn’t learned in 2008, is that there wasn’t one Bernie Madoff, there is a society full of Bernie Madoffs. And most of them are in the Financial Services industry…

Record stock buybacks kept the casino levitated just long enough for insiders to cash out the tax cut. 

“They’re buying back from the front door, and shoveling shares out the back door”

“corporate executives authorized $436.6 billion of stock buybacks during the second quarter, according to TrimTabs. That nearly doubled the previous record of $242.1 billion, which was set during the first three months of 2018″

“Double up. We need to bid up this shit show long enough to get out”


http://ponziworld.blogspot.com

I keep thinking about a crash…how dumb am I? As I write the russell 2000 is up 18 points.

Posted by Richard640 @ 11:36 on August 14, 2018  

[sorry about the caps. I have no time to retype]

 

THERE WILL NEVER BE ANOTHER CRASH OR SERIOUS, LONG,  BEAR STOCK MARKET AGAIN IN OUR LIFETIMES

**********************************************************

WE WILL NEVER SEE A BULL MARKET AGAIN IN GOLD–ALL DUE TO THE FINANCIALIZATION OF EVERY NATIONS ECONOMYHERE’S WHY===

************************************************************

With central bankers so celebrated for blatantly manipulating markets, of course politicians, dictators and the like would insist on getting a piece of the action. Inflating financial markets became essential to power – economic, political and geopolitical. And as finance became integral to economic growth and the global power play, why not use financial sanctions or the threat of financial repercussions to dictate nation-state behavior? And, over time, attaining financial wealth became an absolute prerequisite for wielding geopolitical power and influence.

The old military variety appears almost feeble standing next to the contemporary Financial Arms Race. And if you seek dominance – domestically, regionally and/or internationally – you had better get a tight rein on the securities markets – whether you’re in Washington, Ankara, Moscow or Beijing. Beijing (and it’s “national team”) moved ahead in this regard, but it would appear Washington is today keen to play catch up. As market-based finance has commandeered the world, the centers of global power have moved to take command. [MANIPULATE/CONTROL/SUPPRESS (gold)/SUPPORT] of the markets.

http://creditbubblebulletin.blogspot.com/2018/07/weekly-commentary-intimidate-nobody.html

silverngold–Wow! That’s a collapse!! All these “problems” come and go…like Turkey…like Greece…but they

Posted by Richard640 @ 11:30 on August 14, 2018  

accumulate…and that’s why we will keep getting crashes like in 2000 and 2008…I just don’t know if they’ll be able to blow up the balloon next time…or is this the “creative destruction” that the likes of Kudlow rhapsodizes over as necessary for new industries to replace the old???

re Retail Collapse: 57 Biggest Store Closings

Posted by Mr.Copper @ 11:26 on August 14, 2018  

The underlying problem for all retailers has to do, in part, with a lack of USA Made products in their existing physical stores inventories.  They are getting what they deserve. Selling “rat poison” to there customers.

Columbus Gold and IAMGOLD Enter into an Agreement on the Maripa Gold Project in French Guiana

Posted by ipso facto @ 10:39 on August 14, 2018  

https://ceo.ca/@nasdaq/columbus-gold-and-iamgold-enter-into-an-agreement-on

Wow I didn’t see this yesterday. First Majestic really got hammered after their quarterly report came out.

Posted by ipso facto @ 10:35 on August 14, 2018  

http://schrts.co/E6wePE

Barrick shares bounce on final permits for giant Alaska gold mine

Posted by ipso facto @ 10:31 on August 14, 2018  

Shares in Barrick Gold Corporation (NYSE:ABX)(TSX:ABX) clawed back some of its earlier losses in after hours trade on Monday after the company and its JV partner NovaGold Resources’ (TSX, NYSE-MKT: NG) announced final federal permits for its massive Donlin project.

Barrick said the US Army Corps of Engineers and Bureau of Land Management issued a joint Record of Decision for Donlin located in Southwest Alaska four months after the publication of the project’s final environmental impact statement, “marking the completion of the multi-year federal environmental review process.”

The Corps issued a combined Clean Water Act Section 404 and Rivers and Harbors Act Section 10 permit to Donlin and the BLM also issued rights for a natural gas pipeline right of way crossing federal lands.

cont. http://www.mining.com/barrick-shares-bounce-final-permits-giant-alaska-gold-mine/

Glad to see things are going so well America. How they gonna whitewash this one???????

Posted by silverngold @ 10:30 on August 14, 2018  

Retail Collapse: Here Are 2018’s 57 Biggest Store Closings

Closed storefronts are typical in American cities across shopping malls that once flourished in commercial zones of suburbia are now empty and abandoned.

As the retail apocalypse deepens, more than 3,800 stores are expected to close across the country this year. Department stores like Kmart, Macy’s, Sears, and JCPenney, and retailers including Best Buy, Payless, BCBG, Abercrombie & Fitch, and Bebe have decided to close dozens of locations.

A new report by real estate research firm Reis noticed that shopping malls had not been this empty since 2012, CNBC reported. The vacancy rate at regional and super-regional malls in the U.S. reached 8.6 percent in the second quarter of 2018, up from 8.4 percent in the prior quarter.

The increased vacancy rate is simultaneously occurring while online retailing giant Amazon continues to acquire a more significant share of the consumption pie.

According to Reis, the vacancy rate of malls could significantly jump over the next several years. Even Credit Suisse believes 25 percent of shopping malls will shut their doors by 2022.

As shoppers move online and mall traffic declines, NJ Advance Media has provided a complete and  startling list of the 57 biggest retail chains shuttering storefronts as of recent:

Abercrombie & Fitch

In March 2018, Abercrombie & Fitch announced it would close up to 60 more stores amid struggling sales and other closures in 2016 and 2017. The company has not announced if any of the New Jersey locations will close, and so far they’ve all stayed in business. Currently there are stores in Atlantic City, Bridgewater, Cherry Hill, Deptford, Eatontown, Edison, Elizabeth, Freehold, Paramus, Rockaway, Short Hills and Wayne.

Aeropostale

The retailer filed for bankruptcy in the spring of 2016, but in the fall of 2016 was acquired by a group of mall owners for $243 million. The sale was expected to save about 230 of Aeropostale’s 800 stores, according to Fortune. More than 100 stores were set to close after the bankruptcy filing, but the N.J. stores, so far, have never been on the chopping block.

Aerosoles

Edison-based women’s footwear chain Aerosoles has filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy and will close a “significant” number of stores, the company said in a September statement. While the company didn’t disclose how many or which of its 88 locations will be shuttered, it said it will maintain four flagship stores in New Jersey and New York, and continue to sell online.

American Apparel

The clothing brand filed for bankruptcy in 2016 and closed all stores, but its trademark was bought by Gildan Activewear. The company just recently opened its first brick-and-mortar store in L.A. after an online relaunch.

American Eagle

The teen apparel retailer announced in 2017 that 25 to 40 stores across the country would close, but so far its 20 New Jersey stores and outlets have remained open.

Ann Taylor, Dress Barn, Loft, Lane Bryant, Justice, Catherines, Maurices

In the summer of 2018, Ascena Retail Group — which owns the brands Ann Taylor, Dress Barn, Loft, Lane Bryant, Justice, Catherines andMaurices — announced plans to close 25 percent of retail stores (about 250 locations) by the end of 2019 and an “additional 400 or so stores … through landlord negotiations during the same period,” according to RetailDive.com.

The Banana Republic & The Gap

In September 2017, Gap Inc. announced it would close 200 Gap and Banana Republic stores over the subsequent three years. The company, however, said that it plans to open 270 new locations for Old Navy and Athleta. No N.J. closures have been announced.

Barnes & Noble

The book giant said in 2013 that it would close a third of its retail stores by 2023. These days, B&N has struggled to sell its Nook device and just abruptly fired its CEO. Several New York stores have shuttered; all of the New Jersey locations but one (North Brunswick) have survived so far.

BCBG Max Azria

The clothing retailer filed for bankruptcy in February 2017 and will close more than 100 stores across the country. About a dozen N.J. locations, including some in Lord & Taylor and Bloomingdale’s department stores, have remained open.

Bebe 

The women’s clothing retailer shut down all its U.S. stores in 2017 amid struggling sales, but continues to sell online at bebe.com.

Best Buy

In March 2018, Best Buy announced plans to shut down it’s small mobile phone kiosks, though no closures of the main stores have been announced.

Bon-Ton 

Bon-Ton, which operates 250 locations nationwide, announced in April that it will liquidate all U.S. stores after a bid for the company’s assets was accepted in bankruptcy proceedings. The department store has two N.J. locations, in Brick (80 Brick Plaza) and Phillipsburg (1200 Highway 22 East), both of which are still currently open.

Brookstone 

In August 2018, Brookstone — the mall staple known for its tech gadgets and massage chairs — announced plans to close its 101 mall stores, including seven locations in New Jersey, after filing for bankruptcy.

Charming Charlie

The beauty and accessories chain filed for bankruptcy in December 2017 and plans to close 100 stores. No word yet on the fate of the seven N.J. locations.

Chico’s

Chico’s, which also owns White House Black Market and Soma, said it would cut 240 jobs and close 120 stores, though which stores will close has not been announced. This year, the company announced “a collaboration with Amazon.com that will see a selection of Chico’s brand products go on offer on the e-commerce platform,” according to fashionnetwork.com.

The Children’s Place

In March 2017, the Secaucus-based chain announced plans to close 300 stores by the end of 2020, upping the number from a previous plan of closing 200 stores by 2017. No word yet on which, if any, of the 43 New Jersey locations are slated to shut their doors.

Claire’s

In March 2018, the teen jewelry and accessories brand announced it would close 92 stores as it files of bankruptcy, including N.J. stores in Voorhees, Livingston, Jersey City, Hackensack, Rockaway, Edison and Toms River.

Crocs

In 2017, Crocs said it will close 160 stores due to falling revenues. The shoe retailer has four locations in New Jersey — in Atlantic City, Blackwood, Elizabeth and Tinton Falls — but those stores have survived the closures so far.

CVS Pharmacy

CVS will close 70 stores to save $265 million, but the chain has not announced the location of the closures. In December 2017, CVS announced it had completed an acquisition of Target’s pharmacy and clinic businesses for $1.9 billion.

Finish Line

The shoe and athletic-apparel retailer will close 150 stores by 2020. In January 2016, the company blamed issues and losses on a new warehouse management system it had introduced, which, according to a report by the Wall Street Journal, caused order-processing issues, leading to millions in lost sales. Finish Line has not announced which, if any, of its 33 N.J. locations are closing.

Foot Locker

In March 2018, the shoe chain announced it would close 110 stores (after closing 147 in 2017), but it also plans to open 94 new locations this year, according to Business Insider.

GameStop

After slumping sales, GameStop in March 2017 announced plans to close between 150 and 225 locations. Which stores will be closed has not yet been revealed.

GNC

In April 2018, the vitamin and wellness chain announced plans to close 200 stores this year. No word yet on which stores will close.

Guess

In a March 2017 earnings call, Guess’ CEO announced 60 stores would close and that more could be shuttered in 2018. The retailer has not announced which, if any, of its New Jersey locations, will close.

Gymboree

Faced with a June 2017 interest payment on its more than $1 billion in debt, children’s clothing chain Gymboree filed for bankruptcy and announced plans to close up to 450 stores. The retailer has a dozen locations in New Jersey, but no specific store closures have been announced.

hhgregg

In March 2017, the appliance and electronics chain announced it will close more than 100 stores across the country. Its three N.J. locations, in Moorestown, Mays Landing and Deptford at Woodbury, have since closed.

JCPenney

JCPenney closed its locations at Rio Grande Plaza in Middle Township and at Garden State Plaza in Paramus as part of a larger plan to shutter 138 stores across the country. The department store has 13 other locations in New Jersey.

Jos A. Bank/Men’s Wearhouse

The parent company of the men’s suit chains, Tailored Brands, is on track to close 250 stores. The closures include 80 to 90 Jos. A. Bank stores and 58 outlet stores, according to Fortune, though which stores will close next hasn’t been announced.

Kmart

Kmart, which is part of Sears Holdings, will also close stores in New Jersey. The company will close 42 stores across the country, including seven here: Clementon, Clifton, East Brunswick, Pleasantville, Mantua, Manahawkin and Rio Grande.

The Limited

The women’s clothing chain closed all 250 of its locations, including New Jersey stores, in January. The chain is continuing to sell online.

Lord & Taylor

The department store will close “up to 10 stores” through 2019, including its Fifth Avenue location, “in order to better balance the brand’s brick and mortar presence with its online channels and increase profitability,” a spokeswoman told NJ Advance Media. Lord & Taylor has not announced which stores will close.

Macy’s

Macy’s announced it will close 68 stores across the country, cutting 10,000 jobs, after disappointing holiday sales. Three N.J. locations have closed, in Moorestown, Voorhees and Wayne.

Mattress Firm

The mattress retailer announced it would close 274 stores, but open about 75 new stores. No word on the fate of the more than 100 N.J. Mattress Firm locations.

Michael Kors

The namesake retailer of the “Project Runway” judge, Michael Kors closed 125 stores in 2017. Michael Kors has New Jersey locations in Edison, Freehold, Lawrenceville, Bridgewater, Elizabeth, Short Hills, Jersey City, Flemington, Wayne, Rockaway, Cherry Hill, Deptford, Blackwood, Atlantic City and Paramus that have so far remained open.

Nine West

The shoe retailer filed for bankruptcy in April 2018 and announced it would close all 70 of its retail stores. Nine West still sells shoes online.

Office Depot 

Office Depot has continued to shrink nationwide. In a 2016 report by the Consumerist, the office supply chain said it expects to close 300 more stores by 2019 to help cut annual costs by $250 million. The fate of the chain’s remaining N.J. stores is uncertain.

Payless

Payless announced that it would close stores in New Jersey as part of the company’s plan to shutter 400 locations across the country after filing for bankruptcy in 2017. The New Jersey locations that will close are: Loews Shopping Center, East Rutherford; Marlton Crossing, Marlton section of Evesham; Mid State Mall, East Brunswick; Phillipsburg Mall, Phillipsburg; Bloomfield Avenue, Bloomfield; Acme Plaza, Cape May Court House section of Middle Township and Marlboro Plaza, Marlboro.

Perfumania

In August 2017, the discount perfume retailer said it would close 64 of its 226 stores during bankruptcy filings. There are six Perfumania stores open in N.J.; a Woodbridge location has closed.

RadioShack 

RadioShack closed more than 1,000 stores across the country over the past two years, including all locations in New Jersey, but just announced a partnership with HobbyTown to open express store-within-a-store locations, according to CNN Money.

rue21

Four New Jersey locations of teen clothing retailer rue21 were among 400 across the country that closed as the company filed for bankruptcy. Stores in the Livingston Mall in Livingston, the Ocean County Mall in Toms River, Jersey Shore Premium Outlets in Tinton Falls and Hamilton Mall in Mays Landing have closed, while stores in the Cumberland Mall in Vineland, Cross Key Commons in Turnersville, Moorestown Mall and Audubon Crossings remain open.

Sam’s Club 

In January, Walmart announced it would close 63 Sam’s Club locations, and immediately closed N.J. locations in Budd Lake, Princeton andLinden. There are seven Sam’s Club stores left in the state.

Sears

In May 2018, Sears announced it will close another 62 stores across the country. In New Jersey, only the Vineland, Ocean and Burlington Sears locations have closed, but the location in Lawrenceville will close in September.

Staples

In 2017, the office supplies chain announced plans to close 70 stores. Staples has about 75 locations in New Jersey. The company has not said if any of the N.J. stores will close.

Teavana 

Starbucks has closed all 379 of its Teavana stores. There were 11 Teavana stores in New Jersey.

Toys R Us

Toys R Us kids all over mourned the loss of the toy retailer, which closed all stores in 2018.

True Religion

Jeans retailer True Religion has filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy and will close 27 of its 140 stores as the company restructures. Only one New Jersey store has closed so far — the location at Garden State Plaza in Paramus.

Vitamin World

In 2017, the vitamin chain said it would close 124 stores. The only N.J. location that has closed was the one in the Phillipsburg Mall. Moorestown Mall, Woodbridge Mall, Bridgewater Mall and Jersey Gardens Mall (Elizabeth) stores have remained open.

Walmart 

In early 2016, Walmart announced plans to close 154 stores, but so far has only closed one of their 70 N.J. stores; the location in Readington closed in Feb. 2018.

Wet Seal 

The teen clothing chain declared bankruptcy and began closing stores in 2015. In 2017, the company closed all of its remaining stores across the country, including N.J. locations in Freehold Raceway Mall and Monmouth Mall.

United States Of America Is Possibly A Misnomer Too

Posted by Mr.Copper @ 10:24 on August 14, 2018  

Decades ago I used to call us the United States Of Europe because they were always somewhat leading us and pushing their ways on us. HMOs ring a bell? Also showing preferential treatment for various elections.

United States Of China is another consideration since they own us somewhat, re Bonds and industries.

United States Of Global Banks or Corporations sounds logical too. However that’s all in the past. Things are changing, in reverse.

R640 – indeed

Posted by Buygold @ 10:19 on August 14, 2018  

HUI down a point

and the nightmare continues…

“Emerging Markets” Is Another Misnomer, They Did Not Just Emerge Out Of Nowhere.

Posted by Mr.Copper @ 10:06 on August 14, 2018  

They were created artificially ahead of their time, mostly by US Consumer dollars, and US businesses moving industries and jobs to the so-called poor undeveloped nations. Globalization. Affirmative action with wealth instead of race. Happy about that? Hug your Toyota today. Hug your Sony TV made in China.

Another one of those days–gold up 5.30—NUGT down 7 cents–

Posted by Richard640 @ 9:57 on August 14, 2018  

Thanks Maddog for pointing this out–this guy is a terrific analyst!

Posted by Richard640 @ 9:45 on August 14, 2018  

Russell Napier: “Turkey Will Be The Largest EM Default Of All Time”

Submitted by Russell Napier of ERIC
 
One wonders why investors expect President Erdogan, a man who has referred to them as like the loan sharks who enslaved the Ottoman Empire, to choose to repay the foreigner and accept the crushing socio-political cost on the local population of doing so? Even if Turkish institutions have the ability to pay, something your analyst has long doubted, the President will forbid them from doing so. This is a large default and it will prove to be almost a total default.
 
Regular readers of the Fortnightly will know that The Solid Ground has long forecast a major debt default in Turkey. More specifically, the forecast remains that the country will impose capital controls enforcing a near total loss of US $500bn of credit assets held by the global financial system. That is a large financial hole in a still highly leveraged system. That scale of loss will surpass the scale of loss suffered by the creditors of Bear Stearns and while Lehman’s did have liabilities of US$619bn, it has paid more than US$100bn to its unsecured creditors alone since its bankruptcy.

Nice bounce

Posted by Buygold @ 9:28 on August 14, 2018  

Go down $18, get back $2

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Post by the Golden Rule. Oasis not responsible for content/accuracy of posts. DYODD.