Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy

The Global Reach of Kuroda’s Premature Celebrations

By |2019-02-22T13:00:56-05:00February 22nd, 2019|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

The unemployment rate isn’t just misleading in the US, though the gap between what it suggests here and what isn’t happening is now enormous. This idea of a labor shortage, or LABOR SHORTAGE!!!! as each case may be, was itself as global as synchronized growth when it showed up in later 2017. There were stories about Chinese factories unable to [...]

Sinking Shippers Signal Global Goods Troubles

By |2019-02-21T17:50:19-05:00February 21st, 2019|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

It infects every boardroom across the world. Big business requires decent forecasting, yet time and again it seems they are deprived of what they desperately need. Instead, even after this last decade, the world’s largest companies continue to be surprised by weakness that is far more prevalent than strength. It has been the one constant. Central bankers declare their policies [...]

FOMC Minutes: The New Narrative Takes Shape

By |2019-02-20T16:48:28-05:00February 20th, 2019|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Nothing the Fed did today, or has done up to today, has changed the curves. Eurodollar futures and UST’s, they are both still inverted. The former sharply inverted. The only thing that has changed since early January is the narrative – and not in a charitable way. It is treated as a positive when it is a pretty visible signal [...]

More TIC December: More Shadow(s) Than Shadow Money

By |2019-02-20T15:46:15-05:00February 20th, 2019|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

The TIC data for December 2018 starts out well enough, exactly the way it should. The headline says foreigners sold a record amount of US$ assets in that month. Anyone paying attention during it would be the opposite of shocked. Everyone sold anything they could in December. It follows from the idea of dollar shortage. However, then you start asking [...]

Something Different About This One

By |2019-02-19T19:33:50-05:00February 19th, 2019|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

In Japan, they call it “powerful monetary easing.” In practice, it is anything but. QQE with all its added letters is so authoritative that it is knocked sideways by the smallest of economic and financial breezes. If it truly worked the way it was supposed to, the Bank of Japan or any central bank would only need it for the [...]

Not Even PBOC Supports Yuan’s Reserve Role

By |2019-02-19T13:07:35-05:00February 19th, 2019|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

China’s yuan just isn’t a stable currency. I don’t mean its exchange value, either. CNY floats up and down on the whims of the eurodollar. The PBOC can and does limit the daily trading band, but often at tremendous cost (ticking clock). Therefore, the internal constraint governing this dynamic is a symptom of a world that isn’t going to accept [...]

Chart of The Week: TICsense

By |2019-02-15T17:32:51-05:00February 15th, 2019|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

TIC update for December 2018. Given what happened in that particular month, yeah, this seems about right: Here’s the same thing smoothed out on a 6-month basis. Plus an added reminder. Just to refresh: That’s a shame because TIC will tell you so much more about the global economy and the changes taking place within it than the Establishment Survey [...]

Where It All (Should Have) Started

By |2019-02-15T16:58:45-05:00February 15th, 2019|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

It was late on a Friday night in early September 1997. Because his speech was given at Stanford University out in the Pacific Time Zone just as the weekend was about to commence, market watchers were bated with an almost frenzied anticipation. Alan Greenspan had come to be seen as more than just a monetary policy bureaucrat. He had conquered [...]

China’s Big Money Gamble

By |2019-02-15T12:06:00-05:00February 15th, 2019|Commodities, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

While oil prices rebounded in January 2019 around the world, outside of crude commodities continued to struggle. According to the World Bank’s Pink Sheet, base metal prices fell another 1.8% on average from December. On an annual basis, these commodities as a group are about 16% below where they were in January 2018. The last time they had fallen by [...]

Germany Avoids Technical Recession, Thereby Confirming High Degree of Recession Risk?

By |2019-02-14T19:14:37-05:00February 14th, 2019|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

German GDP was the smallest of positives in Q4 2018, according to figures released today by DeStatis. Following a -0.2% rate in Q3, no matter how slight the plus sign was written into every headline. Most of them followed along the same format, such as CNBC’s Germany narrowly escapes recession after flat growth in the fourth quarter. That’s entirely premature. [...]

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