The US and other developed countries will see twelve months of downturn. One emerging market will experience a full blown crisis, according to Robin Bew at the Economist Intelligence Unit.
The cooling the market has experienced in the last 9 months combined with a slowing economy means it's plausible that house prices could drop by a third over the next three years.
Sandy Jadeja looks at the FTSE and Dow Jones over a variety of timescales and cautions that the general market downtrends look set to continue until at least December 15th.
One year into the credit crunch David Linton assesses the UK market with particular emphasis on the key banking and mining sectors and concludes that we're in 'classic bear territory'.
With so much market turmoil and geopolitical uncertainy there should be a rush to gold. However, David Linton at Updata shows why he's cautious. In a review of currencies he looks at the state of sterling against the dollar and euro.
Despite last week's rate cut, deflationary pressures mean potential buyers are playing a waiting game to see just how much further the market might fall before they consider a move, says Eric Leenders at the British Bankers Association
Five of the FTSE's top 10 stocks are miners and any sign of a downtrend in the sector could spell disaster. Updata's David Linton shows why investors should be glued to the outcome of mining's current phase of volatility.
Mid-cap stocks should benefit from further interest rate cuts thanks to the domestic bias of their earnings, says Justin Jordan at Credit Suisse Asset Management.
Simon Derrick from BNY Mellon assesses the prospects for both sterling and the dollar in both the medium term and gives some predictions on how the currencies will perform relative to their peers.
Does bad news drive prices down? David Linton at Upata looks at several charts to see what influence news has on the markets and whether there is any difference between large and small caps.
Updata's David Linton explains market breadth analysis - a superior way of understanding trends and turning points for going over or underweight in stocks.
Current UK economic data is 'very grim indeed' and comparisons to the recession of the early 1990s are appropriate, says Alan Clarke at BNP Paribas. He suggests the BoE should cut rates by a full percentage point today in an attempt to improve confidence.
The relief rally in the US dollar has failed to impress Greg Smith at Fat Prophets, who says the underlying fundamentals supporting the Greenback are still pretty dire. In contrast, the recent decline in oil prices should be seen as a correction in a longer term bull market.
Tom Hougaard at City Index on how this week's market volatility is "nectar" for short-sellers. He looks at the FTSE and where it's likely to go after this week's amazing developments and draws parallels with market events of the past.
Chris Watling at Longview Economics explains why the current bear market is likely to be amongst the worst for 90 years, and analyses the parallels and differences between today's situation and the bear market's of the 1930s and 1970s.
David Linton shows how moving average charts can be useful when asking if a stock is trending up or down. Here he looks at several methods using FTSE and the stocks of Rolls-Royce and BA as examples.
The gold price is currently well supported due to its safe haven status and a weakening dollar should increase the commodity's value yet further, says Robin Bhar at Calyon.
A veteran of the UK property scene, Winkworth CEO Simon Agace casts his eye over London and the regions and explains why he believes the market may have reached the bottom.