Yearly Archives: 2017

Political Economics

By |2017-10-20T11:49:25-04:00October 20th, 2017|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Who President Trump ultimately picks as the next Federal Reserve Chairman doesn’t really matter. Unless he goes really far afield to someone totally unexpected, whoever that person will be will be largely more of the same. It won’t be a categorical change, a different philosophical direction that is badly needed. Still, politically, it does matter to some significant degree. It’s [...]

Officially A No-growth World

By |2017-10-19T17:51:45-04:00October 19th, 2017|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

I really don’t think people quite understand just how much trouble China is in right now. That’s no mystery because in the Western media the Chinese economy is almost always described as somewhere between awesome and magnificent (only slight hyperbole). Their government, on the other hand, is not fooled. General Secretary Xi Jinping opened the Communist Party’s 19th Congress with [...]

Sinking Apartments (Not From Storms)

By |2017-10-18T17:37:58-04:00October 18th, 2017|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Housing construction continues to slow in 2017, dragged down by fewer multi-family projects. Total permits and starts have essentially flatlined since 2015, a further slowdown from one already slowdown. The single-family market is still growing but at a historically tepid pace, leaving the pace of construction overall to be dictated by weakness in apartment development. In September 2017, new permits [...]

A Derivatives Look At What Happened To ‘Reflation’

By |2017-10-18T16:14:18-04:00October 18th, 2017|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

The Office of the Comptroller of the Currency (OCC) reports that total gross notional derivatives contracts owned and outstanding by domestic banks rose for the second straight quarter. The OCC statistics are one quarter behind, meaning that though banks themselves are reporting Q3 numbers with earnings all figures shown here are from the official compilation for Q2. As such, the [...]

Dollar Denial

By |2017-10-18T12:50:45-04:00October 18th, 2017|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

At this point in the longer term process of unwinding the Fed’s prior emergency activities, the yield curve was supposed to flatten. That was the plan all along. If monetary policy was successful, or had even run into just dumb luck somewhere in the last ten years, here where policymakers declare the economy to be short rates would be moving [...]

Distinct Lack of Good Faith, Part ??

By |2017-10-17T18:52:06-04:00October 17th, 2017|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

It was a busy weekend in retrospect, starting with Janet Yellen and other central bankers uncomfortably facing a global media that has become (for once) increasingly unconvinced. Reporters, really, don’t have much choice. The Federal Reserve Chairman might not be aware of just how much she has used the “transitory” qualifier since 2015, but others can’t be helped from noticing. [...]

Less Than Square One

By |2017-10-17T17:49:11-04:00October 17th, 2017|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Goldman Sachs was the latest Wall Street bank to jump on low volatility. Despite an enormous gain in prop trading, most of the rest of the firm’s results were moving in the wrong direction. In its market making segment, for example, the firm booked $2.1 billion in net revenue in the third quarter, 22% less than what it took in [...]

Broader Slowing In IP

By |2017-10-17T13:06:38-04:00October 17th, 2017|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Industrial Production rose 1.6% year-over-year in September 2017. That’s up from 1.2% growth in August, both months perhaps affected to some degree by hurricanes. The lack of growth and momentum, however, clearly predated the storms. The seasonally-adjusted index for IP peaked in April 2017, and has been lower ever since. This pattern, the disappointment this year is one we see [...]

What Else Needs To Be Said? Why It Will Continue, Con’t

By |2017-10-16T18:38:16-04:00October 16th, 2017|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

If the essence of modern eurodollar money is bank balance sheet capacity, then we need not wonder what has gone wrong or why. The very heart of this global currency system no longer beats so healthy and strong. Global banks shrink rather than expand at a breakneck pace, their desire to do the latter restrained by the incapacity of the [...]

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