Markets

Let’s Get This Over With: Factory Orders More Toward Finality

By |2016-02-04T16:07:17-05:00February 4th, 2016|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Factory orders declined for the fourteenth consecutive month. At -4.3%, the year-over-year drop wasn’t huge but we are now into comparing consecutive yearly contractions. In other words, factory orders in December 2015 were 4.3% less than December 2014 which were 2.4% less than December 2013. It isn’t so much the magnitude as the time now in that consistency. In seasonally-adjusted [...]

If Services Stumble Too There Truly Is Nothing Left

By |2016-02-03T17:34:13-05:00February 3rd, 2016|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

So much for the services savior? The worries about manufacturing weakness spreading are spreading. It’s maddening only because it was entirely predictable, maybe even inevitable. If consumers aren’t buying goods, and they aren’t, it is not because they are otherwise healthy (in financial terms) and have only just recently decided they have in the aggregate accumulated enough stuff. The economy [...]

Potential Connections

By |2016-02-03T16:59:30-05:00February 3rd, 2016|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets, Stocks|

You simply cannot act as a money dealer when the money you are dealing is highly suspect. I am not writing about money in the true sense, such as any tangible form that falls under property laws of custody and bailment, but rather the wholesale “money” that is derived under the much looser and unconstrained terms of financial laws and [...]

NIRP Is So Simple

By |2016-02-03T11:56:03-05:00February 3rd, 2016|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Why won’t monetary policy just work as designed? It sounds so utterly simple: To review: Interest rates are the price of lending and saving money. When interest rates throughout the economy are low, banks charge less for loans and individuals have less incentive to save; when they're high, lenders charge more and individuals save more. This is why central banks [...]

Suicidal Tendencies, But ‘New and Improved’!

By |2016-02-03T11:14:32-05:00February 3rd, 2016|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Advertising in the modern age is an extremely difficult task with all the clutter and noise. If you hadn’t noticed, it leaves many products experimenting with packaging in order to sell “new and improved.” The “easy pour spout”, for instance, became commonplace as if the old manner of detergent weren’t easy or comfortable to begin with. I seriously doubt that [...]

No Confidence Vote – Raging RHINO

By |2016-02-02T20:28:27-05:00February 2nd, 2016|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

FOMC Voting Member Esther George issued a vote of confidence for the economy, despite financial turmoil returning across asset markets again today. With front month WTI back under $30, her idea of a strong economy and anchored inflation expectations is still highly imperiled. She remains completely dogged, however, undeterred for further “normalization” of monetary policy largely as the US economy [...]

A Relevant Liquidity Lesson For Complex Structures

By |2016-02-02T18:24:16-05:00February 2nd, 2016|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

In the third quarter 10-Q from Capital One, the bank notes a rather large change in funding. At the start of the year, Capital One had drawn $17.72 billion in advances from the Federal Home Loans Banks (which of the twelve isn’t stated and it is likely there were funding agreements with several). The FHLB system allows banks to pledge [...]

Personal Savings Up Meaning No Energy ‘Tax Cut’ Reaches Consumers

By |2016-02-02T15:55:11-05:00February 2nd, 2016|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

If China and US manufacturing are suffering from what looks like the contours of a slowly progressing recession, we don’t have to go very far to find the genesis. The common denominator is and has been US consumers. That much is evident in very clear fashion through retail sales during the Christmas season that were abysmal. The BEA’s update for [...]

PMI Convergence

By |2016-02-02T12:39:28-05:00February 2nd, 2016|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

The Chinese Manufacturing PMI spent most of the past four and a half years straddling just the good side of 50. In fact, it hasn’t been above 52 since early 2012 – a quite remarkable feat of low variation. This fruitlessness is somewhat emblematic of China’s dilemma; no matter what they do the industrial and manufacturing sector will not catch [...]

It Starts: Junk Bonds ‘Contained’

By |2016-02-01T18:31:02-05:00February 1st, 2016|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets, Stocks|

To an economist, the economy can bear no recession. In times of heavy central bank activity, an economy can never be in recession. Those appear to be the only dynamic factors that drive economic interpretation in the mainstream. And they become circular in the trap of just these kinds of circumstances – the economy looks like it might fall into [...]

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