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  <title>John Rubino--Instability Has Arrived a la The Money Bubble  #2396</title>
  <description>John relates&amp;amp;nbsp;that last week saw the global financial system tip from delusion &amp;amp;mdash; where it had happily drifted for several years &amp;amp;mdash; into chaos. Consider the following more-or-less randomly chosen data points:&#13;
&#13;
French unemployment hits record high&#13;
Italian unemployment hits record high&amp;amp;nbsp;&#13;
Oil&amp;amp;rsquo;s price falls by $10.36/bbl, or 13.5%, in a single day, to its lowest price since 2010.&amp;amp;nbsp;&#13;
Copper falls by 6%&amp;amp;nbsp;to $2.86/lb, 25% below its 2013 high.&amp;amp;nbsp;&#13;
European bond yields fall to record lows.&amp;amp;nbsp;Even Italy, with government debt exceeding 130% of GDP, can now borrow for around 2%.&amp;amp;nbsp;Japan, meanwhile, issues bonds with negative interest rates.&amp;amp;nbsp;&#13;
European inflation approaches zero,&amp;amp;nbsp;with several member states apparently already in deflation.&amp;amp;nbsp;&#13;
Emerging markets see the opposite trend, as a soaring dollar causes their currencies to fall and inflation to spike. The Russian ruble falls by 7.3% to a record low, while the currencies of Brazil, Colombia, Mexico and Chile drop by at least 1.9%. See&amp;amp;nbsp;Brazil&amp;amp;rsquo;s Rousseff vows immense effort to slow inflation.&#13;
Chinese malinvestment, a topic of conversation ever since those ghost city pictures started circulating, is pegged at $6.8 trillion, or about 70% of China&amp;amp;rsquo;s entire economy.&amp;amp;nbsp;&#13;
As Prudent Bear&amp;amp;rsquo;s Doug Noland put it his&amp;amp;nbsp;November 28 Credit Bubble Bulletin, &amp;amp;ldquo;Collapse of the &amp;amp;lsquo;global reflation trade&amp;amp;rsquo; runs unabated. Where might contagion strike next?&amp;amp;rdquo;&amp;amp;nbsp;&#13;
The answer is in one final set of stats: Last week the S&amp;amp;amp;P 500 and Dow Jones Transports hit record highs, while the Nasdaq 100 index of tech stocks rose to its highest level since March 2000, just before its epic crash.&#13;
If everything but equities is being sucked into a 2008-style deflationary vortex, how much longer can US stocks hold out? Probably not long.&#13;
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  <author_name>Kerry Lutz's--Financial Survival Network</author_name>
  <author_url>https://FinancialSurvivalNetwork.com</author_url>
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