by John E. Charalambakis | Dec 6, 2013 | Commentaries
Next Tuesday U.S. regulators are expected to approve a stricter version of the Volcker rule. The latter prohibits banks from proprietary trading which was at the heart of the financial crisis not only in 2008 but also last year when J.P.Morgan lost more than $6...
by John E. Charalambakis | Nov 27, 2013 | Commentaries
Last Saturday night the P5+1 nations (US, UK, France, Germany, Russia, and China) signed a limited agreement with Iran that paves the way for something which potentially would be very significant not only for security reasons but also for economic and financial ones....
by John E. Charalambakis | Nov 14, 2013 | Commentaries
Two days ago the third plenum of the Chinese eighteenth central committee meeting ended and all indications point to an historic event. Third plenums tend to consolidate power for the Chinese leader and produce significant economic and political changes. It was in...
by John E. Charalambakis | Nov 10, 2013 | Commentaries
Goethe’s insights into the seriousness of the problem of historical epistemology reminds us that in human history some have chosen to reject the notion of historical truth by diverting their poetic enthusiasm to heroic events that like in a legend have transformed the...
by John E. Charalambakis | Nov 2, 2013 | Commentaries
The essence of this commentary is twofold: First, to explain how and why the rising levels of financial lubrication are expected to generate and support a rally in equities and to a lesser extent in bonds. Second, to discuss how those elevated lubrication levels may...
by John E. Charalambakis | Oct 24, 2013 | Commentaries
In a interview on CNBC Mario Draghi (the head of the European Central Bank, ECB) told us yesterday that he is concerned about capital insufficiencies, balance sheet holes, and backstops related to the EU banks. He added that there is a need to “dispel the fog”...