Market & Economic Analysis

"Study the past if you would devine the future." - Confucius

The Dirty Demon-etizing End Of A Reserve Era

Late in March 2020, the Bank of Russia (BoR) abruptly announced it would no longer purchase gold. For years, Russia’s monetary authorities had been the metal’s biggest buyer, not just among official institutions but anywhere in the world. In fact, the country had been steadily accumulating bullion ever since October 2006; an effort that accelerated, not coincidentally, in April 2014 [...]

Last Year Wasn’t The Year of Inflation, It Consistently Set Up This Year For Inflationary Fail

The most common explanation for UST repo fails is that short sellers become an imbalance in the market for Treasuries. Convinced (isn’t everyone?) interest rates have nowhere to go but up and these instruments are doomed, therefore ripe to profit from the destruction, short selling sharks supposedly swoop in. Since they’ve borrowed UST’s they don’t own, the herd is susceptible [...]

Briefing Even More Inventory

Retail sales stumbled in December, contributing some to the explosion in inventory across the US supply chain – but not all. Inventories were going to spike even if sales had been better. In fact, retail inventories rose at such a record pace beyond anything seen before, had sales been far improved the monthly increase in inventories still would’ve unlike anything [...]

By |2022-02-28T20:03:49-05:00February 28th, 2022|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

SWIFT Isn’t The ‘Nuclear Option’ For Russia, Because The World Is Eurodollar Not Dollar

As everyone “knows”, the US dollar is the world’s reserve currency which can only leave the US government in control of it. Participation is both required and at the pleasure of American authorities. If you don’t accept their terms, you risk the death penalty: exile from the privilege of the US dollar’s essential business.From what little most people know about [...]

By |2022-02-28T18:48:54-05:00February 28th, 2022|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Weekly Market Pulse: Well, That Was A Surprise

Last week when I wrote this weekly piece, the S&P 500 futures were down 80 points as Russia appeared poised to attack Ukraine, which they ultimately did last week. Today I sit here to write again and the futures are once again down, this time around 100 points. What's interesting is that the level this evening is well above last [...]

A Speculative Story: Treasuries in Belgium, Russians in Ukraine, and Derecognized NFC Loans Changing Across Europe (but mainly Belgium)

Have European banks begun to lend in a way that will lead to actual inflation? For Europe’s central bankers, this is a huge question. For so many years despite almost constant QE, banks have consistently refused to do so. Even with supercharged asset purchases begun in 2020, there still hasn’t been any correlation between ECB activities and bank lending.This is [...]

By |2022-02-27T15:35:30-05:00February 27th, 2022|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

These Are The Charts/Data The Fed Is Ignoring In Its Rush To Mistake Rates

The labor theory of inflation, the one the FOMC will use to justify rate hikes in 2022 (as far as they might go), isn’t just wages and competition for the presumed scarce marginal worker. While a tight labor market might drive up the marginal cost for labor inputs, in order for companies to then pass those higher costs back to [...]

By |2022-02-25T17:25:48-05:00February 25th, 2022|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

What Does She Mean, Worse?

At issue is what she or they mean when the use the qualifier “worse.” It may be that how policymakers are thinking about it ends up being very different from reality or bond market discounting. No surprise, these two camps have frequently been at odds and for a very long time; Alan Greenspan’s “conundrum” a full seventeen years ago this [...]

By |2022-02-24T20:06:53-05:00February 24th, 2022|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

The Red Warning

Now it’s the Russian’s fault. Belligerence surrounding Donbas and Ukraine, raw materials and energy supplies to Europe threatened by Putin’s coiled bear. Why wouldn’t markets grow worried?There’s always a reason why we shouldn’t take these things seriously, or quickly dismiss them out of hand as the temporary product of whichever political fear-of-the-day. This isn’t to write that these things aren’t [...]

By |2022-02-23T19:50:06-05:00February 23rd, 2022|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|
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