Economy

Waiting For Earnings To Correct? Q1 And Forward EPS Update

By |2016-06-22T12:50:43-04:00June 22nd, 2016|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets, Stocks|

EPS estimates are always in the practice of falling over time, so that natural process should be considered when comparing across the movement of the calendar. That said, however, earnings continue to defy projections of a rebound. This is not to say that analysts aren’t expecting one, only that the expectation keeps pushing further out in time. According to Howard [...]

Re-investigating The Simple Assumptions

By |2016-06-21T19:32:08-04:00June 21st, 2016|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

In February 1999, the Bank of Japan announced that its call money rate would be zero “until deflationary concerns subside.” Other than a temporary shift in 2001 and 2006, deflationary concerns remain. How effective was monetary policy? That point has been partially answered by the introduction of QE over and over and over again. The zero lower bound is to [...]

Always More

By |2016-06-21T17:33:19-04:00June 21st, 2016|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

For decades the slander against Herbert Hoover went unchallenged. He was branded a “do nothing” in the 1932 campaign, a charge which looks sillier the more time passes. The proper slander of Hoover is that he was Roosevelt before FDR was, only in miniature. From this view we can appreciate the intentional change in perspective; Hoover’s interventions failed to stop [...]

Greenspan to Yellen; Incoherence The Common Theme But Vastly Different Receptions

By |2016-06-21T12:17:50-04:00June 21st, 2016|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

It is human nature to extrapolate in straight lines, to take what is as what should forever be. In economic statistics, tail risks continue to live outside the tails because the math can never get past that limitation. No matter how sophisticated the “jump diffusion” tendencies, no one can predict inflections. This is not to say there aren’t warnings, usually [...]

‘Selling Dollars’ Again

By |2016-06-20T18:40:08-04:00June 20th, 2016|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

With the sudden interjection of uncertainty halting the surge in Brexit odds since the unfortunate attack on British MP Jo Cox last week, the financial world has benefitted from the pound’s resurrection. Sterling has had a very good couple of days in this reversal, especially today. As it rises it adds the same as we saw on the day of [...]

The European Basis For New Monetary Science

By |2016-06-20T17:24:13-04:00June 20th, 2016|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Looking back it almost sounds like a completely different world. In the end, however, the world hasn’t changed, perceptions have. On May 10, 2012, German newspaper Spiegel reported that Bundesbank’s (Germany’s central bank) chief of its economics department, Jens Ulbricht, testified in the German parliament that German inflation was likely to be, “somewhat above the average within in the European [...]

New Monetary Science

By |2016-06-20T13:00:21-04:00June 20th, 2016|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Around 150 AD Claudius Ptolemaeus of Alexandria (Ptolemy) wrote perhaps the most significant ancient astronomical text, his Mathematike Syntaxis. Part of its durability was due to Ptolemy’s careful and laborious summation of ancient thought up to that time. Divided into 13 books, it was the last five that added most of his original work. They set up geometric models to [...]

About That Economy That ‘Should Be’

By |2016-06-17T19:32:21-04:00June 17th, 2016|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

There are those who are calling for James Bullard to be fired. While that might be deserved given recent history, I believe keeping his place at the head of the St. Louis Fed will do the world far more good. To recap, in March Bullard was unequivocal that the Fed must raise rates or risk facing “devastating bubbles.” Just three [...]

Fed’s Own Models Contradict Their Rhetoric

By |2016-06-17T18:39:05-04:00June 17th, 2016|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

The June FOMC meeting coincides with the quarterly update of the Federal Reserve’s modeled economic and policy projections. As usual, the economy forecasts have been cut for both 2016 and 2017. The upper bound for the “central tendency” of real GDP in 2016 was 3% in the modeled calculations made at the end of 2014, those that saw no fallout [...]

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