Markets

PBOC RMB Restraint Derives From Experience Plus ‘Dollar’ Constraint

By |2017-09-19T18:05:25-04:00September 19th, 2017|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Given that today started with a review of the “dollar” globally as represented by TIC figures and how that is playing into China’s circumstances, it would only be fitting to end it with a more complete examination of those. We know that the eurodollar system is constraining Chinese monetary conditions, but all through this year the PBOC has approached that [...]

Why The Fed’s Balance Sheet Reduction Is As Irrelevant As Its Expansion

By |2017-09-19T16:39:11-04:00September 19th, 2017|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

The FOMC is widely expected to vote in favor of reducing the system’s balance sheet this week. The possibility has been called historic and momentous, though it may be for reasons that aren’t very kind to these central bankers. Having started to swell almost ten years ago, it’s a big deal only in that after so much time here they [...]

Swimming The ‘Dollar’ Current (And Getting Nowhere)

By |2017-09-19T12:29:47-04:00September 19th, 2017|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

The People’s Bank of China reported this week that its holdings of foreign assets fell slightly again in August 2017. Down about RMB 21 billion, almost identical to the RMB 22 billion decline in July, the pace of forex withdrawals is clearly much preferable to what China’s central bank experienced (intentionally or not) late last year at ten and even [...]

144 Years Later, Cooke’s Legacy Still Reminds Us To Understand What Happened Not Just What Happened After

By |2017-09-18T18:39:59-04:00September 18th, 2017|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

It is a great myth that before 20th century monetary inventions there were no liquidity safeguards in the country. If the Federal Reserve wasn’t founded until 1913, then it may seem that private currency elasticity before then was non-existent. The several bank panics that occurred with almost regularity in the second half of the 19th century seemingly a testament to [...]

If They Wish To Replace LIBOR With Repo, They Should Already Start Thinking About Repo’s Replacement

By |2017-09-18T17:00:51-04:00September 18th, 2017|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Sometimes you just have to laugh. A lot has been made on the inside of LIBOR’s assumed demise. The suite of interest rates is not being discontinued really, merely relegated to the backbench. As usual, the rationale for doing so is perfectly sound: As noted by the Financial Stability Board’s Market Participants Group, there are many current uses of LIBOR [...]

It Was Collateral, Not That We Needed Any More Proof

By |2017-09-18T16:20:49-04:00September 18th, 2017|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Eleven days ago, we asked a question about Treasury bills and haircuts. Specifically, we wanted to know if the spike in the 4-week bill’s equivalent yield was enough to trigger haircut adjustments, and therefore disrupt the collateral chain downstream. Within two days of that move in bills, the GC market for UST 10s had gone insane. To be honest, it [...]

Expectations and Acceptance of Potential

By |2017-09-15T17:46:30-04:00September 15th, 2017|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

The University of Michigan reports that consumer confidence in September slipped a little from August. Their Index of Consumer Sentiment registered 95.3 in the latest month, down from 96.8 in the prior one. Both of those readings are in line with confidence estimates going back to early 2014 when consumer sentiment supposedly surged. During that same period, however, consumer spending [...]

IP Weathers Storms But Not Cars

By |2017-09-15T16:05:09-04:00September 15th, 2017|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

In late August 2006, ABC News asked more than a dozen prominent economists to evaluate the impacts of hurricane Katrina on the US economy. The cataclysmic storm made landfall on August 29, 2005, devastating the city of New Orleans and the surrounding Gulf coast. The cost in human terms was unthinkable, and many were concerned, as people always are, that [...]

Retail Sales and the End of ‘Reflation’

By |2017-09-15T11:52:59-04:00September 15th, 2017|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

There will be an irresistible urge to the make this about the weather, but more and more data shows it’s not any singular instance. Nor is it transitory. What does prove to be temporary time and again is the upside. The economy gets hit (by “dollar” events), bounces back a little, and then goes right back into the dumps. This, [...]

The CPI Comes Home

By |2017-09-14T18:24:14-04:00September 14th, 2017|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

There seems to be an intense if at times acrimonious debate raging inside the Federal Reserve right now. The differences go down to its very core philosophies. Just over a week ago, Vice Chairman Stanley Fischer abruptly resigned from the Board of Governors even though many believed he was a possible candidate to replace Chairman Yellen at the end of [...]

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