Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy

Third CPI In A Row, Yet All Eyes On That 30s Auction

By |2021-07-13T20:07:06-04:00July 13th, 2021|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Three in a row, huge CPI gains. According to the BLS, headline consumer price inflation surged 5.39% (unadjusted) year-over-year during June 2021. This was another month at the highest since July 2008 (the last transitory inflationary episode). The core CPI rate gained 4.47% last month over June last year, the biggest since November 1991. More impressive (or worrisome, depending upon [...]

Bitcoin, El Salvador, And…The Eurodollar’s Ghost

By |2021-07-13T17:31:20-04:00July 13th, 2021|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

The Salvadoran colón is still technically legal tender in El Salvador. The country’s government under President Francisco Flores had passed the Law of Monetary Integration in 2000, taking effect on January 1, 2001. This legalization of the US dollar for domestic circulation didn’t specifically remove the colón from common purchases or prohibit its use; the country’s Central Reserve Bank just [...]

A Whole Lot of Synchronized

By |2021-07-12T17:26:32-04:00July 12th, 2021|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Another day, another alarming piece of data delivered from China. Anyone looking for where the PBOC’s “surprise” RRR cut late last week is coming from, the Chinese car market provides yet another pretty stunning and consistent example. Together with other recent datapoints, as well as uniformly falling global bond yields, it’s more evidence for the growing very possibilities of a [...]

RRP No Collateral Coincidences As Bills Quirk, Too

By |2021-07-09T19:50:23-04:00July 9th, 2021|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

So much going on this week in the bond market, it actually overshadowed the ridiculous noise coming from the Fed’s reverse repo. Some maybe too many want to make a huge deal out of this RRP if only because the numbers associated with it have gotten so big. To end Q2 2021, financial counterparties “lent” just about $1 trillion to [...]

How Do You Spell Escalating? C-H-I-N-A-R-R-R

By |2021-07-09T16:48:15-04:00July 9th, 2021|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

There are three letters you never want to see hit the Chinese news. Actually, it’s the same letter just repeated three times. If the People’s Bank of China (PBOC), the country’s central bank and top bank regulator, ever decides to reduce or cut their RRR you know things are getting serious. And not in a good way.This, of course, won’t [...]

Bond Reversal In Japan, But Pay Attention To It In Germany

By |2021-07-08T19:49:30-04:00July 8th, 2021|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Yield curve control, remember that one? For a little while earlier this year, the modestly reflationary selloff in bonds around the world was prematurely oversold as some historically significant beginning to a massive, conclusive regime change. Inflation had finally been achieved across multiple geographies, it was widely repeated, and this would create problems, purportedly, as these various places would have [...]

Eurodollar Curve Quirk Trivia, But Not Trivial To Anti-Inflation

By |2021-07-07T19:40:25-04:00July 7th, 2021|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Quirks or kinks in the eurodollar futures curve are nothing new, materializing from time to time as much for technical reasons as anything else. Still, there are those instances – such as June 2018 – when these represent meaningful changes in outlook and condition. Back in the middle of that year, the sudden inversion in the curve along the 2020-21 [...]

Forget Inflation, Half A Deflation Signal: Yields Down But Not (yet) Dollar Up

By |2021-07-06T19:37:14-04:00July 6th, 2021|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

The 30-year US Treasury bond yield dipped below 2% today for the first time since early February. The unsurprising nasty “surprise” in the ISM combined with more concerning data especially surrounding China released over the long American holiday weekend have added more weight to fears the global economy has reached the limits of reopening. If we’ve already seen its best [...]

ISM’s Nasty Little Surprise Isn’t Actually A Surprise

By |2021-07-06T17:14:23-04:00July 6th, 2021|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Completing the monthly cycle, the ISM released its estimates for non-manufacturing in the US during the month of June 2021. The headline index dropped nearly four points, more than expected. From 64.0 in May, at 60.1 while still quite high it’s the implication of being the lowest in four months which got so much attention. Consistent with IHS Markit’s estimates [...]

Go to Top