Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy

Fading Further and Further Back Toward 2016

By |2017-06-20T18:41:01-04:00June 20th, 2017|Bonds, Commodities, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Earlier this month, the BEA estimated that Disposable Personal Income in the US was $14.4 trillion (SAAR) for April 2017. If the unemployment rate were truly 4.3% as the BLS says, there is no way DPI would be anywhere near to that low level. It would instead total closer to the pre-crisis baseline which in April would have been $19.0 [...]

Now China’s Curve

By |2017-06-20T12:56:30-04:00June 20th, 2017|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Suddenly central banks are mesmerized by yield curves. One of the jokes around this place is that economists just don’t get the bond market. If it was only a joke. Alan Greenspan’s “conundrum” more than a decade ago wasn’t the end of the matter but merely the beginning. After spending almost the entire time in between then and now on [...]

TIC Consistency in April

By |2017-06-19T19:20:33-04:00June 19th, 2017|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Chinese officials earlier this month broadcast they were ready to buy US Treasury bonds again. After selling an unknown quantity (there are different figures, none of which exactly agree) over the past few years, the announcement was clearly aimed at China’s exchange rate. Officials have taken to CNY stability as a central focus of official policy, to the detriment even [...]

Root Monetary Behavior

By |2017-06-19T18:01:39-04:00June 19th, 2017|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets, Stocks|

Capitalism has always featured feedback mechanisms. They never were perfect, as nothing is going to ever be. Instead, market discipline was always a messy affair as it more often throughout history included periods of undisciplined behavior followed closely by mass exodus, crash, and then depression. Economists after 1929 thought of themselves as a replacement mechanism for self-correction. Regulators had until [...]

More Pieces of Impossible

By |2017-06-19T16:52:05-04:00June 19th, 2017|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

On his company’s earnings conference call back on Valentine’s Day, T-Mobile CEO John Legere was unusually feisty. Never known for shyness, Legere had reason behind his bluster. T-Mobile had practically built itself up on price, being left the bottom tier of the wireless space practically to itself. That all changed, however, as both Verizon and Sprint were set to escalate [...]

Bi-Weekly Economic Review: Has The Fed Heard Of Amazon?

By |2019-10-23T15:09:55-04:00June 18th, 2017|Alhambra Research, Bonds, Commodities, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets, Taxes/Fiscal Policy|

The economic surprises keep piling up on the negative side of the ledger as the Fed persists in tightening policy or at least pretending that they are. If a rate changes in the wilderness can the market hear it? Outside of the stock market one would be hard pressed to find evidence of the effectiveness of all the Fed's extraordinary [...]

History May Rhyme, But These Curves Repeat

By |2017-06-16T19:11:50-04:00June 16th, 2017|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

What is most tragically ironic about the last decade is that the people who are supposed to have been in charge are the same people claiming it could never happen. Ben Bernanke, for example, made his career on studying the Great Depression. Using Milton Friedman’s brand of primitive monetarism as a base, he and others like him developed the modern [...]

Haunting Yellen

By |2017-06-16T16:26:57-04:00June 16th, 2017|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

I wouldn’t put it in the category of LBJ “losing Cronkite”, but it is at least a measure of amplified pressure (or just any pressure). This week has been utterly embarrassing for the Federal Reserve, a central bank that refuses to define clearly what it is attempting to do. It leaves questions even for who used to be highly sympathetic. [...]

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