Economy

Still Stuck In the Slowdown; Retail Sales Continue

By |2016-04-13T16:55:58-04:00April 13th, 2016|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Calendar effects, base effects, and holidays continued to plague retail sales estimates. Where February 2016 included a 29th day of extra selling/buying, March finds an early Easter holiday relative to last year (it was in April). The result is difficult comparisons where the unadjusted series is not measuring underlying consumer growth but these other factors. That should change, however, in [...]

Not Snow or Seasons, Just Slow

By |2016-04-12T17:25:35-04:00April 12th, 2016|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Last year, economists were fed up with winter. They had had enough of Q1’s always lagging, threatening to upend the idea that there is a solid and improving recovery. To drop a negative GDP quarter into that mix was the final straw, since negative quarters are exceedingly rare – they actually don’t occur outside of recession. In the four decades [...]

Consequences of Conflating Wall Street With Capitalism

By |2016-04-12T15:56:12-04:00April 12th, 2016|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

https://twitter.com/SenSanders/status/719255892710068224 We tried this model of "banking" already once.  Even the NBER found it to be "bubbly." We use exogenous variation in banks’ incentives to conform to the standards of the Community Reinvestment Act around regulatory exam dates to trace out the effect of the CRA on lending activity. Our empirical strategy compares the lending behavior of banks undergoing CRA exams [...]

Secular Stagnation Would Be The Best Case, But It’s Not Even Realistic

By |2016-04-12T13:42:02-04:00April 12th, 2016|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

The IMF released the first 2016 edition of its World Economic Outlook (WEO). Titled Too Slow For Too Long, it seems as if the institution has finally caught on to the fact that the global recovery never really was a recovery. Throughout the report you get the sense that they are starting to figure out what is going wrong but [...]

The Global Economy Didn’t Change Last Year, Views of QE Did

By |2016-04-12T08:27:34-04:00April 11th, 2016|Bonds, Commodities, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets, Stocks|

The stock market is still viewed as if it were a discounting mechanism, a system where information is processed and priced to deliver insight about the fundamental state of liquidity, markets, and the economy. That view has always been debatable, but never more so than the whole of this century so far. What were share prices suggesting, fundamentally, in March [...]

2012 Redux; They Really Don’t Know What They Are Doing

By |2016-04-11T17:15:25-04:00April 11th, 2016|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

The old adage is that strong and sustained economic growth cures many ills, if not all of them, so it is unsurprising that so many central banks would be so determined to create it. They are, surprisingly, limited in that endeavor as they always stop one step short of recognizing the shortfall. In other words, they will do everything (as [...]

I Repeat China Repeats

By |2016-04-08T17:37:48-04:00April 8th, 2016|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

China’s official reported reserves rose in March for the first time in five months. Though reserves had fallen to barely $3.2 trillion in February, that was down just $28.6 billion from January, being already hailed as a success and a step in the right direction since that was less than a third of the shocking decline in January (-$99.5 billion). [...]

Supply Chain Slowdown

By |2016-04-08T15:55:38-04:00April 8th, 2016|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Not to continue beating a dead horse, but I have a stick and the carcass is right in front of me. The entire supply chain inside the US economy is full agreement both on where the economy is right now and, perhaps more importantly, how it came to be that way. Such harmony is not atypical, as synchronicity usually defines [...]

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