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About Jeffrey P. Snider

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China: Where A Rising Currency Is Meant To Be Inflationary

By |2017-09-11T17:22:15-04:00September 11th, 2017|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

As much as officials in Beijing may outwardly fight it, they are still in the “dollar” business. It’s not raw conjecture, either. Though we don’t know the specifics of their policy positions, in this context we don’t need to know them; it’s all right there on the central bank balance sheet. The most prominent thing about China right now is [...]

The Real Euro Watch

By |2017-09-08T17:15:14-04:00September 8th, 2017|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Everyone is now a euro watcher. The European common currency’s exchange value against the dollar has been on the rise, to put it mildly. Despite decades of declaring floating currencies the optimal framework, it really is quite entertaining to watch the furor when these things actually float one way or the other. This recent trend has been attributed to the [...]

Why So Much Inventory?

By |2017-09-08T12:40:32-04:00September 8th, 2017|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Liquidity and more so liquidity preferences are vastly misunderstood for a whole host of reasons. A lot of it has to do with the dominant strains of Economics battling each other (saltwater vs. freshwater) over which statistical model fails less frequently. In shifting to mathematics and statistics, something great has been lost. Economists don’t understand how an economy works; and [...]

Enough With The Labor Shortage Already, It Doesn’t/Can’t Exist

By |2017-09-07T18:39:00-04:00September 7th, 2017|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Can we finally put to rest all notions that the US economy is at full employment and doing well, and therefore wage inflation is right around the corner? I suspect not. This dance has been ongoing for years now, continuing through what was nearly a recession, so there is little reason to believe that economists are so data dependent. The [...]

Wherefore Art Thou Collateral?

By |2017-09-07T16:40:36-04:00September 7th, 2017|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

The US Treasury as a result of the government’s bloated response to the Great “Recession” has been forced in notes and bonds to reopen their auctions each and every month. Before then, reopenings were less frequent. They weren’t infrequent, but the Treasury wasn’t just auctioning 10s every month. In 2007, for example, the Department conducted four quarterly auctions and one [...]

Canada’s RHINO(s)

By |2017-09-06T18:18:59-04:00September 6th, 2017|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

The Bank of Canada “raised rates” again today, this time surprising markets and economists who were expecting more distance between the first and second policy adjustments. The central bank paid typical lip service to being data dependent. It has a vested interest if you, as any Canadian reader, believe that to be a fact. But what we really find in [...]

Of Rules And Slack, And The Real Rule of Slack

By |2017-09-06T17:49:53-04:00September 6th, 2017|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

In 1993, Stanford economist John B. Taylor wrote an influential paper that introduced the economics profession (statisticians, almost all) to what was later called the Taylor Rule. The need for such a “rule” was an unspoken outgrowth of monetary evolution. In the 1960’s and 1970’s long-established regression models estimating the influence of then-defined money on economic variables had broken down [...]

‘Something’ Is Still Out There

By |2017-09-06T13:17:37-04:00September 6th, 2017|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

In January 2016, just as the wave of “global turmoil” was cresting on domestic as well as foreign shores, retired Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke was giving a series of lectures for the IMF. His topic wasn’t really the so-called taper tantrum of 2013 but it really was. Even ideologically blinded economists like Bernanke could see how one might have [...]

Once Again, Not Korea but March

By |2017-09-05T18:37:52-04:00September 5th, 2017|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

It's hard not to put all emphasis on missile tests and other serious forms of sabre rattling. Even doing so, as the bond market may be doing right now, however, misses the underlying. Everything at the moment traces back to mid-March, which in hindsight was a very eventful month in full far away from the Korean peninsula. Take, for example, [...]

Global PMI Roundup; August 2017

By |2017-09-05T16:50:23-04:00September 5th, 2017|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

The first few days of any calendar month are now flooded with PMI data. Mostly due to Markit’s ongoing and increasing partnerships, we now have access to economic or business sentiment from and for almost anywhere in the world. It isn’t clear, however, if that is a good or useful development. For example, we can see quite plainly that there [...]

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