Markets

Lingering

By |2015-09-01T10:58:31-04:00September 1st, 2015|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

With stocks selling off at least in morning trading, everyone is back asking “is it over” after last week supposedly quelled so much surface disquiet. The rebound in oil prices has been robust and a broad survey of “dollar” proxies indicated that the hugely negative run from August has relented. The notable exception to that trend has been Brazil and [...]

Volatility As ‘Money’; Or Really Rising Vol As Anti-Money

By |2015-08-31T18:23:54-04:00August 31st, 2015|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

I think it is worth re-examining at this point, with a lull in the “dollar” at the moment, the effects of dark leverage upon actual bank mechanics and thus actual “dollar” supply. The idea of liquidity in the wholesale system is multi-dimensional and often confusing as it relates to what is typically believed. For example, the week the world woke [...]

It Was Never An Option

By |2015-08-31T16:17:04-04:00August 31st, 2015|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

In her testimony before Congress in July, Janet Yellen laid out the same talking points that have been propagated onto Americans time and time again these past eight years. The economy is moving forward and the Fed is doing and has done everything it can, and that there are “green shoots” still though no full and mature growth. Low oil [...]

The Age of Voodoo

By |2015-08-31T12:15:30-04:00August 31st, 2015|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

The Jackson Hole gathering may end up providing at least some clarification, but not even close to the manner in which everyone seems intent on inferring. With Janet Yellen’s notable absence, there isn’t the same sort of celebrity about what would have been the media hanging upon every word; that is, after all, what the Federal Reserve has become, not [...]

The Weekly Snapshot

By |2015-08-31T00:12:39-04:00August 31st, 2015|Markets|

Top News Headlines Whipsaw market in full effect. Stocks stage a bounce-back, at least temporarily. The VIX Index is still at 26. Crude oil up over 10% for the week; biggest weekly gain in 6 years. Sanders, Trump ride anti-establishment wave. Fed rate cut to be delayed? Alaska's Mount McKinley to be renamed Denali. Random Thought Of The Week Is China [...]

Still Not Where We’re Going…

By |2015-08-30T22:11:53-04:00August 30th, 2015|Markets, Stocks|

Let's start this week's missive off with a disclosure of sorts - I am not Joe Calhoun. Unlike Joe, I have managed to hold on to my hair over the years although the last week has been challenging in that regard.  Joe and his lovely wife, Fay, took an extended weekend off and headed towards Key West (a trip planned [...]

Turning Just 2.4% Income Growth Into A Robust Recovery

By |2015-08-28T17:47:49-04:00August 28th, 2015|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Today’s release of personal income and spending is very much related to the revised GDP figures, though I have no doubt that the BEA wishes it were not. To start with, the ongoing chain of benchmark revisions has produced an inordinately volatile set of economic accounts. That is quite against the stated purpose of all this adjusting and statistical intrusiveness; [...]

What The Yen Might Reveal

By |2015-08-28T12:10:04-04:00August 28th, 2015|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

The moment you add the yen to any larger financial discussion it inevitably brings out passionate response. I think that is derived partially from its status as unbelievably durable; if there is one currency in the world that “deserves”, so to speak, ultimate execution it is that of the Japanese. The Bank of Japan has done more than any other [...]

When The Yen Was A Last Resort Safety Bid, You Know It Was Bad

By |2015-08-27T15:05:02-04:00August 27th, 2015|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

It looks like the reversal of Monday’s dramatic and frightful liquidation has held and gained in the past two days. From that we can infer, of only the near-term, that those forced repositions were enough to square the liquidity imbalance from the latest “dollar” run. The two words are related not just in a common semantic root, as liquidations are [...]

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