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About Jeffrey P. Snider

Give us a call at 1-888-777-0970 or via email at info@alhambrapartners.com to discuss how his unique approach informs our investment decisions. We'd be happy to discuss our investment strategies and provide a complimentary portfolio review.

Systemic Blindness

By |2017-05-31T19:31:56-04:00May 31st, 2017|Commodities, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

MF Global failed on a trade that would have made it enormously profitable. AIG’s portfolios of “toxic waste” ended up making money – for the Federal Reserve. Bear Stearns and Lehman Brothers were ended like the others by liquidity, not losses. SemGroup was another firm that went into bankruptcy during that period, but one that practically no one has heard [...]

When Up Or Down Might Not Matter

By |2017-05-31T17:04:50-04:00May 31st, 2017|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Many surveys of especially manufacturer sentiment were for most of the past few years highly volatile in their month-to-month changes. It wasn’t at all unusual for the Chicago Business Barometer, for example, to be up big one month and then down just as much if not more the next. What was important was not those individual swings but that these [...]

A Better Mirror

By |2017-05-31T15:59:54-04:00May 31st, 2017|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

In the earliest days of the Federal Reserve, it was common practice for the various branch administrations to hold direct communications not just with the banks in those respective districts but also individual firms. The reasoning was sound enough, given that in the 1910’s and 1920’s there weren’t yet the kind of economic statistics that today litter the media landscape. [...]

Appropriately Rewriting History According To Price Stability

By |2017-05-30T19:04:30-04:00May 30th, 2017|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

The Federal Reserve defines price stability in terms of consumer prices rather than a stable currency. Up until 2012, any inflation target was implicit in monetary policy behavior rather than explicitly stated as an incorporated aspect. Everyone knew, of course, that the Fed had throughout the 1990’s sought a stable regime of around 2% growth in the PCE Deflator. Furthermore, [...]

Not A Cycle; Weakness Produces Further Weakness No Matter How Confident

By |2017-05-30T17:29:06-04:00May 30th, 2017|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

If economists are hoping for more than signs of wage acceleration, revisions to the Personal Income data series are going to make it that much harder to justify still seeing them. Income was revised lower across-the-board. The base effect of oil prices that had been supporting “reflation” may have had the opposite effect on consumers. In common sense terms, consumers [...]

The Real Signs That Matter

By |2017-05-30T12:44:10-04:00May 30th, 2017|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

We don’t live in a perfect world by any means. Because of that, it may from time to time seem like mere noise when something just doesn’t to fit. There will always be irregularities in life, the inherent nature of humanity inherent in the systems humans create. Thus, it pays to remember not to let perfection become the enemy of [...]

The Disappeared Economy

By |2017-05-26T18:21:22-04:00May 26th, 2017|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

At the end of April 2015, the Commerce Department reported that unadjusted durable goods shipments (ex transportation) had totaled $177.6 billion in the month of March 2015. That represented just a half of one percent year-over-year gain, but at a crucial moment in economic history the plus sign was quite welcome for the attempt at the “transitory” narrative. That estimate, [...]

Simple (economic) Math

By |2017-05-26T16:03:23-04:00May 26th, 2017|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

The essence of capitalism is not strictly capital. In the modern sense, the word capital has taken on other meanings, often where money is given as a substitute for it. When speaking about things like “hot money”, for instance, you wouldn’t normally correct someone referencing it in terms of “capital flows.” Someone that “commits capital” to a project is missing [...]

So, Bitcoins

By |2017-05-25T17:58:22-04:00May 25th, 2017|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Bitcoins are a remarkable bit of innovative technology. When they were first introduced quietly at the end of October 2008, nobody noticed it or the fitting timing. The design paper for the cryptocurrency was published anonymously at the very same moment the dominant global currency, the eurodollar, was undergoing its severe reckoning. The latter is in many ways like the [...]

Almost Certain

By |2017-05-25T17:50:59-04:00May 25th, 2017|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

It doesn’t appear as if the OPEC decision went as the oil ministers might have hoped. Agreeing to a nine-month extension, more than the usual six months, it was still less than the whispered year that had been rumored and seemingly supported as late as yesterday. Still, Saudi Energy Minister Khalid al-Falih was encouraged. We found out that 9 months [...]

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