alan greenspan

Strike 1: Gold; Strike 2: Dollar; Strike 3: Inflation Expectations

By |2020-07-28T17:33:47-04:00July 28th, 2020|Markets|

When people accuse the Federal Reserve of anything when it comes to inflation, they say the central bank is cooking the books to hide it. Back in 2000, for example, monetary observers were aflutter as policymakers shifted away from the CPI and to the PCE Deflator as their ultimate standard for broad consumer price behavior. The bastards, the latter widely [...]

Yield Caps = Toddlers

By |2020-07-08T17:42:59-04:00July 8th, 2020|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

The Federal Reserve has cut its QE purchasing pace, and yet the US Treasury Department doesn’t seem hampered by a shortage of bidders for its record-setting note auctions. Far from “too many” Treasuries, prices are once more unequivocal how there aren’t enough. With or without Powell, the auction record is clear and, unlike those constantly talking up the BOND ROUT!!! [...]

There Was Never Going To Be A ‘V’ Because The Bowl Was Always Empty

By |2020-06-11T19:33:47-04:00June 11th, 2020|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets, Stocks|

What was stupidest about the past few months was how it was these guys who everyone was depending upon to make it all go just perfectly moving forward. Worse, those geniuses being held up as competent economic stewards practically reran the 2008 playbook line by line. What that said, more than anything, was that they had come up with zero [...]

Ring, Ring, Hündchen

By |2020-05-19T16:02:24-04:00May 19th, 2020|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

They really do seem to love Jay Powell’s announcement effect, these Germans. Magic words, no relation to what’s actually done only what’s said. Confirming in every way what I wrote yesterday, the psychology of money-less monetary policy being acted out exactly according to the plan. Central bankers do, those trained by Economics schools respond in predictable fashion.Pavlov is in awe [...]

Stocks Haven’t Been Moneyed

By |2020-05-18T19:57:09-04:00May 18th, 2020|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets, Stocks|

Why didn’t 1987 turn out to be 1929 redux? Alan Greenspan was deathly afraid this would be the case, and in turn he made everyone else unnecessarily upset along the same lines. Especially Congress. The fact that both stock market crashes occurred during the month of October, though, actually ends the similarities. That plus clueless Federal Reserve officials.Why the one [...]

The Big Picture’s Going To Need More Than Magic Words

By |2020-05-14T19:20:26-04:00May 14th, 2020|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

What connects March 2020 with February 2008 as well as the Crash of ’87 all then with the Great Contraction which initiated the Great Depression? If you said economic and financial chaos, you’d be partly right. There wasn’t really much or any of that in 1987, though there was with the other three. People including politicians and central bankers don’t [...]

Weimar Ben Didn’t Happen, So Now Weimar Jay?

By |2020-05-04T17:26:01-04:00May 4th, 2020|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Anna Jacobson Schwartz often gets buried under the mountains of study Milton Friedman conducted on his own. Contrary to what some, perhaps many, might think, Friedman didn’t write A Monetary History by himself. Anna Schwartz was his co-author for what would become one of the most important volumes of economic scholarship of the entire 20th century.Pretty much every central bank [...]

The Unpossibly Pure Signal

By |2020-04-29T12:46:26-04:00April 28th, 2020|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

If a central bank controls the money supply, then it can, in theory, control inflation. And if it accomplishes this feat through the use of a short-term money rate, then what part of bond yields would lie beyond its power? None.That’s what bond yields are, after all, in theory the carrying forward of inflation expectations into the future built upon [...]

The Greenspan Moon Cult

By |2020-03-04T15:27:59-05:00March 4th, 2020|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Taking another look at what I wrote about repo and the latest developments yesterday, it may be worthwhile to spend some additional time on the “why” as it pertains to so much determined official blindness, an unshakeable devotion to otherwise easily explained lunar events. The short version: monetary authorities as well as the “experts” describe almost perfectly risk averse behavior [...]

History Shows You Should Infer Nothing From Powell’s Pause

By |2020-01-30T18:55:02-05:00January 30th, 2020|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Jay Powell says that three’s not a crowd, at least not for his rate cuts, but four would be. As usual, central bankers like him always hedge and say that “should conditions warrant” the FOMC will be more than happy to indulge (the NYSE). But what he means in his heart of hearts is that there probably won’t be any [...]

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