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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.

The Warning Embedded Within The Interest Rate Fallacy

By |2016-06-28T18:28:57-04:00June 28th, 2016|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

On November 4, 2010, then-Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke wrote his infamous oped for the Washington Post “welcoming” the world to a second round of quantitative easing. The very fact that there was a second iteration belied the whole point of “quantitative”, but the mistakes about “easing” have proven far more problematic. There wasn’t anything new or unusual in his [...]

GDP Corporate Profits And Cash Flows Rebound in Q1, But Not Really

By |2016-06-28T12:07:07-04:00June 28th, 2016|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Accompanying the final estimate for Q1 GDP is the first estimate for the corporate profits and cash flow components. Profits rebounded from a dismal Q4, but that actually means much less than it sounds especially in the more important segments. Corporate profits before tax (without IVA and CCadj) were an estimated $1.86 trillion in Q1, better than the $1.77 trillion [...]

Money Market Illiquidity Further Removes A Central Myth

By |2016-06-27T18:02:52-04:00June 27th, 2016|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

It might be expected that monetary policy would fail to achieve its goal in attempting to manage the economy when it cannot even meet its own basic technical requirements. The main lever of Fed policy continues to be the federal funds rate even though it is entirely irrelevant, and has been for a long time. There is much more to [...]

Politics of the Monetary Noose

By |2016-06-27T12:05:06-04:00June 27th, 2016|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

In June 2015, Pew Research Center conducted a poll of citizens in European countries in order to gauge public sentiment of the European integration project. They found what they thought was a rebound in favorability. The survey conducted in 2013 appeared then to have been the low point, with the 2014 update finding an uptick in support. By last year, [...]

Liquidity And Risk

By |2016-06-27T10:49:04-04:00June 27th, 2016|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

The real nature of liquidity is not what you see today but what we might find when the going gets tough. Though it is an intangible concept (not that that hasn’t kept economists from trying to quantify it), we can reasonably assume that if overall liquidity today appears impaired under relatively benign conditions, it will be significantly worse as malignancy [...]

Durable Goods Add To The Idea of Depression (Small ‘d’)

By |2016-06-24T17:03:34-04:00June 24th, 2016|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

There wasn’t anything new or surprising in the advance durable goods report. Shipments (ex transportation) were flat and orders were up 1% year-over-year (NSA). Capital goods (non-defense, ex aircraft) shipments fell 3.4%, the tenth straight month of contraction, while new orders were down again (2.6%) for the sixteenth time out of the past nineteen months. The slump only continues. With [...]

Back To Our Regularly Scheduled Programming (UPDATED)

By |2016-06-24T18:21:55-04:00June 24th, 2016|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

It was a nice diversion while it lasted, I suppose. From the moment of the unfortunate murder of the British MP, funding markets, in particular, had been furiously “selling dollars” to get back some of the pound that was falling as Brexit had gained momentum. Media commentary talks about it as if that were the whole topic – it never [...]

Secular Stagnation Is Eurodollar Stagnation

By |2016-06-24T12:14:50-04:00June 24th, 2016|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Last week, the St. Louis Fed published an article based on a speech that Dr. Larry Summers gave to the Homer Jones Memorial Lecture series back in April. The article included the full text of Summers’ speech and importantly the supporting material and evidence he used in his argument for “secular stagnation.” Included is one chart that is among the [...]

What Current Interest Rates Really Mean

By |2016-06-23T18:55:15-04:00June 23rd, 2016|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

On June 14, the 10-year German bund yield traded briefly below zero for the first time. It was an inauspicious record but one that defines the contradictions at the center of all this economic and monetary controversy. On the one hand, that is what central banks tell us they are after especially with QE, to reduce interest rates even at [...]

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