Markets

Stacking Contraction

By |2016-03-03T16:16:46-05:00March 3rd, 2016|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

There can be no doubt as to the manufacturing recession in the US, a direct reflection of US consumers. In a fitting confirmation of Chinese manufacturing, US factory orders declined for the 15th consecutive month in January 2016. The year-over-year decline was 3.3%, only slightly better than the revised 4.2% in December, but the length of this continuous decline means [...]

Another Indication Full Employment Only Applies To Limited Circumstances If At All

By |2016-03-02T16:48:39-05:00March 2nd, 2016|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

When the unemployment rate tumbled toward 5% and now below it, economists thought that was overheating. For monetary policy, that was much of the basis for adjusting Fed communication (not rate hikes, as credit and funding markets are doing the opposite). Despite the “best jobs market in decades”, however, confirmation of that robust labor agenda is scarce at best and [...]

Their Recovery

By |2016-03-02T15:30:16-05:00March 2nd, 2016|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

As I often write, in Japan it is far more difficult to hide the failure of “stimulus.” There are varying degrees of visibility in that regard around the QE world, but they all share negative redistribution as the base alloy. That’s why Janet Yellen may be merely uncomfortable and Mario Draghi increasingly brooding, but Haruhiko Kuroda was just pushed to [...]

More Eurodollar Anecdotes On Shriveling

By |2016-04-06T10:09:11-04:00March 1st, 2016|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Barclays has received all the media attention in the past few days after announcing its exit from Africa. Specifically, the bank intends to divest enough of its 62% stake in the Africa unit so as to skirt tougher UK regulations intended to “ringfence” domestic operations; to keep the global bank from potential global financial horrors recurring and devastating once more [...]

Still Manufacturing

By |2016-03-01T15:33:22-05:00March 1st, 2016|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

The ISM Manufacturing Index was reported at 49.5 for February 2016, up from 48.2 in January. It was the second consecutive rise for the overall index, December being the lowest, so the “it’s all over” narrative has been flying around heavily today. Lost in the relief is that February was the fifth consecutive month below 50 (and sixth straight at [...]

A Slowdown That Won’t Stop Slowing Down

By |2016-03-01T10:49:32-05:00March 1st, 2016|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

China’s official manufacturing PMI slipped to just 49 in February, the worst monthly level since February 2009. It has been below 50 each of the past seven months (and increasingly so during that time) and less than 50.3 since November 2014, an incredible span of 15 straight months. The trend is inarguable, as even economists will now admit Chinese industry [...]

Chicago, Brazil and Maybe No ‘V’?

By |2016-02-29T16:58:17-05:00February 29th, 2016|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

The Chicago Business Barometer fell sharply again in February, almost exactly as it had risen sharply in January. In fact, for the past year that has been the dominant pattern of sharp alternating swings between “growth” and “contraction.” Despite that, months showing up below 50 (this is still a PMI) are still somehow “unexpected”: Chicago-area business activity unexpectedly contracted in [...]

Not Even Secondary Inflation

By |2016-02-29T15:37:29-05:00February 29th, 2016|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

At first economists wanted to just ignore oil prices, as they were to be “transitory” or even beneficial to consumers everywhere around the world. The fact that economists would actually admit that low oil prices would be helpful (in a vacuum, they are) showed only the desperation given the seriousness of the “unexpected” surrender. Mainstream monetary theory rejects all falling [...]

Adding Liquidity Into The Subtraction

By |2016-02-29T12:10:13-05:00February 29th, 2016|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

The PBOC surprised some by lowering the reserve requirement for the Chinese banking system this morning. That marks the sixth reduction since February 4 last year, totaling 350 bps (the reduction on April 19 was 100 bps). By orthodox calculations, that should have added about RMB 2.45 trillion in new “liquidity” as banks freed from holding reserves would have forwarded [...]

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