Bonds

Weekly Market Pulse: On Second Thought…

By |2022-01-10T08:03:24-05:00January 9th, 2022|Alhambra Portfolios, Alhambra Research, Bonds, Commodities, Currencies, Economy, Markets, Real Estate, Stocks|

In individuals, insanity is rare; but in groups, parties, nations, and epochs, it is the rule. Friedrich Nietzsche   The new year got off to quite a bang last week. It was almost as if someone flipped a switch and investors/traders suddenly decided that all that stuff they believed last year was just so passe. Growth stocks? Nah, who wants [...]

Taper Discretion Means Not Loving Payrolls Anymore

By |2022-01-07T20:39:51-05:00January 7th, 2022|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

When Alan Greenspan went back to Stanford University in September 1997, his reputation was by then well-established. Even as he had shocked the world only nine months earlier with “irrational exuberance”, the theme of his earlier speech hadn’t actually been about stocks; it was all about money.The “maestro” would revisit that subject repeatedly especially in the late nineties, and it [...]

Conflict Of Interest (rates): 10-year Treasury Yield Highest in Almost Two Years

By |2022-01-07T18:11:11-05:00January 7th, 2022|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

The dollar was high and going higher. Emerging markets had been seriously complaining. In one, the top central banker for India outright warned, “dollar funding has evaporated.” The TIC data supported his view, with full-blown negative months, net selling from afar that’s historically akin to what was coming out of India and the rest of the world. China was cutting [...]

As The Fed Tapers: What If More Rapid (published) Wage Increases Are Actually Evidence of *Deflationary* Conditions?

By |2022-01-03T20:16:51-05:00January 3rd, 2022|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Since the Federal Reserve is not in the money business, their recent hawkish shift toward an increasingly anti-inflationary stance is a twisted and convoluted case of subjective interpretation. Inflation is money and if the Fed was a central bank the issue of consumer prices wouldn’t necessarily be simple, it would, however, be much simpler: is there or isn’t there too [...]

Xi Told You Last January

By |2022-01-03T17:00:43-05:00January 3rd, 2022|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

The guy was, as usual, explicitly candid when he spoke to his crowd of global billionaires. The Davos gathering of the superrich does much for generating clickbait headlines, though typically followed by the most nondescript phrases only passed off as useful insight. In this setting, Xi Jinping really has been the disruptor.How’s that for irony?Their message - they being everyone [...]

Inflationary Overheating, Tapering and Terminating QE, We’ve Seen These Before And It Didn’t End The Way It Was Supposed To

By |2021-12-30T12:23:09-05:00December 30th, 2021|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

The economy was in danger of running hot, too hot they all said. In order to stay ahead of such inflation potential, as central bankers saw it, first it would be necessary to wind down quantitative easing. Taper then terminate. After that, rate hikes.Hawks buzzing around everywhere.But Mario Draghi’s ECB had a problem. The inflationary pressures were there, he reasoned, [...]

Taper Rejection: Mao Back On China’s Front Page

By |2021-12-28T19:59:21-05:00December 28th, 2021|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Chinese run media, the Global Times, blatantly tweeted an homage to China's late leader Mao Zedong commemorating his 128th birthday. Fully understanding the storm of controversy this would create, with the Communist government’s full approval, such a provocation has been taken in the West as if just one more chess piece played in its geopolitical game against the United States [...]

White-Hot Cycles of Silence

By |2021-12-27T18:46:15-05:00December 27th, 2021|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

We’re only ever given the two options: the economy is either in recession, or it isn’t. And if “not”, then we’re led to believe it must be in recovery if not outright booming already. These are what Economics says is the business cycle. A full absence of unit roots. No gray areas to explore the sudden arrival of only deeply [...]

The Historical Monetary Chinese Checklist You Didn’t Know You Needed For Christmas (or the Chinese New Year)

By |2021-12-22T18:37:20-05:00December 22nd, 2021|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

If there is a better, more fitting way to head into the Christmas holiday in the United States than by digging into the finances and monetary flows of the People’s Bank of China, then I just don’t want to know what it is. Contrary to maybe anyone's rational first impression that this is somehow insane, there’s much we can tell [...]

Start Long With The (long ago) End of Inflation

By |2021-12-21T19:57:18-05:00December 21st, 2021|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

With the eurodollar futures curve slightly inverted, the implications of it are somewhat specific to the features of that particular market. And there’s more than enough reason to reasonably suspect this development is more specifically deflationary money than more general economic concerns. What I mean is, those latter have come later (“growth scare”) only long after the world’s real money [...]

Go to Top