Investor kit made up of 3 brochures

Get $500 and your FREE investor kit!

American gold eagle coin Request your FREE Precious Metals Investor Kit and we’ll immediately add $500 to your account to help you get started!

The $500 can be used for shipping, insurance charges or IRA custodial fees

Lear does not provide financial advice and is a for profit retailer.
Skip to main content
Back to Top
Speak to a specialist 800-576-9355

Billionaire Soros: It's the 2008 crisis all over again

by Lear Capital EditorialJanuary 7, 2016
george soros

In a recent CNBC interview, Billionaire financier George Soros points out the numerous similarities between 2008 and 2016.  

Speaking at an economic forum in Sri Lanka's capital Colombo, he told an audience that China is struggling to find a new growth model and its currency devaluation is transferring problems to the rest of the world, according to media. He added that a return to rising interest rates was proving difficult for the developing world.

The current environment reminded him of the "crisis we had in 2008," The Sunday Times in Sri Lanka reported on Thursday morning. "China has a major adjustment problem," he added, according to Bloomberg. "I would say it amounts to a crisis."

China's CSI 300 tumbled more than 7 percent in early trade Thursday, again triggering the market's circuit breaker. As well as roiling sentiment across Asia, it also battered European risk assets with the German DAX down 3.5 percent at 11 a.m. London time.

U.S. stock index futures also indicated a sharply lower open as investors focused on China's swooning currency and economic slowdown.

China, the biggest economic story of the last 30 years, has soured in the eyes of many analysts. A stock market crash that began in the country last summer has thrown the vast difficulties officials are now facing into sharp relief. A raft of data has disappointed in recent months as the country's leaders refocus the economy on consumption from manufacturing.

Analysts also point to concerns over Chinese market regulators, who they believe do not appear to have a good grasp of the market, even with the introduction of the circuit breakers. In an attempt to stabilize markets,

China's securities regulator has issued new rules to restrict the number of shares major shareholders in listed companies can sell every three months to 1 percent.

Marc Ostwald, a strategist at ADM Investor Services, believes that Soros' comments — alongside a gloomy report Wednesday from the World Bank — only serve to cast a "long shadow" over global markets.

See Full Article

Secure Your Retirement with Gold

Free 2024 Gold Kit
Gold Kit
Lear does not provide financial advice and is a for profit retailer.
We respect your Privacy