Currencies

When You Aren’t Actually A Central Bank, Part 2: The Stubborn Deflation

By |2021-06-02T19:02:33-04:00June 2nd, 2021|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Ever since March 2020, GFC2, Federal Reserve officials from Jay Powell on down have been busy patting themselves on the back for their splendid performance during last year’s big event. Again, market-of-last-resort. It would’ve been much worse, they claim, particularly given what happened in the Treasury market itself which we are supposed to believe QE bailed out just in the [...]

When You Aren’t Actually A Central Bank, Part 1: The Real Inflation

By |2021-06-02T18:50:46-04:00June 2nd, 2021|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

When Ben Bernanke stood up in front of Milton Friedman (it was his 90th birthday) back in November 2002, what he told the co-author of A Monetary History was that the monetary account contained within its pages had become settled, the officially-accepted version of events. What had made the Great Depression truly prolonged and horrific had been the long-ago Federal [...]

The Second Part of the Quantum of Money: Results From The Triparty Repo Experiment

By |2021-06-01T19:47:02-04:00June 1st, 2021|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Taking our limited repo example from Part 1 a step further still, in real-world operation a bank might put up any number of securities – including any it might have just that day obtained full title too – to secure financing all at once. Thus, there are groupings of securities over which the bank has varying degrees of control – [...]

The First Part of the Quantum of Money: QE, Repo, and…Niels Bohr

By |2021-06-01T19:49:53-04:00June 1st, 2021|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Denmark’s Niels Bohr considered himself more of a philosopher than a physicist, yet he contributed so much to the groundbreaking approach that became the basis for quantum physics. At the same time Germany’s Werner Heisenberg was writing the famous paper on “his” uncertainty principle, Bohr was purportedly on vacation thinking up the deeper consequences and meaning of all its implications.Upon [...]

Weekly Market Pulse: Where’s That Confounded Boom?

By |2021-06-01T07:01:47-04:00May 31st, 2021|Alhambra Portfolios, Alhambra Research, Bonds, Commodities, Currencies, Markets, Real Estate, Stocks|

The US economy is still stuck in the stall it's been in since early spring. Sometime in mid-March everything just seems to have gone into suspended animation. Interest rates and the copper/gold ratio stopped rising. Real interest rates (TIPS) stopped rising. The US dollar started falling. But nothing has fallen so far as to warrant concern about a double-dip recession. [...]

Why Do Bonds At Auction Seem To Care More About That One Auction Than ‘Inflation’?

By |2021-05-28T16:18:19-04:00May 28th, 2021|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Back on February 25, Treasury auctioned 7-year notes and it did not go (as) well. Maybe you remember us saying something about it, and then again and again and… The prevailing view then – and now – was reflation hadn’t just accelerated, the true inflation long-promised by so much “money printing” (or at least by those who equate bank reserves [...]

Profitable Unemployment

By |2021-05-27T19:45:17-04:00May 27th, 2021|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

One idea for why the labor market hasn’t come back in nearly the same way as the goods economy or “aggregate demand” has, each spurred on by Uncle Sam’s repeated use of his TGA-fueled helicopter, is that yet another of the federal government’s rescue efforts has hindered the employment rebound – from the worker side. Businesses, many say, really, desperately [...]

Eurodollar University’s Making Sense; Episode 77, Part 2: The QE Fantasy Unwinds, The Truth About Bank Reserves (and repo)

By |2021-05-27T18:42:42-04:00May 27th, 2021|Alhambra Research, Bonds, Commodities, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets, Stocks|

77.2 So, Not Money Printing———Ep 77.2 Summary——— QE has been uniformly aligned with the idea of money printing because it sounds like it and there is a central bank doing it. We have to take central bankers' word that there is a pot of bank reserves at the other end of the QE rainbow. While that part is true, bank [...]

Which Reflation Are You?

By |2021-05-26T19:32:45-04:00May 26th, 2021|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

I am very much prone to bludgeoning several long-deceased equines, and given what’s really going on with the Fed's reverse repo (and nearly all commentary unhelpful surrounding it) this gives me yet another chance to really reuse my cudgel on at least two of them. This another opportunity to fixate more upon bank reserves, a forever topic until everyone learns [...]

No Reserving Interpretation About Reverse Repo Collateral Connection(s)

By |2021-05-26T17:04:58-04:00May 26th, 2021|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Why are Treasury bills the best of the best, the purest of the most pristine? The better part of the answer comes in the form of a mere three letters: O, T, and R. Those happen to stand for on-the-run which in repo simply means dependably liquid. OTR securities are those most recently auctioned thereby the specific securities which have [...]

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