bank of japan

More Careful Than Carefree of Late

By |2017-02-06T19:03:49-05:00February 6th, 2017|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

With JPY pushing above its recent resistance (for whatever might have caused it), it is useful to determine if that is an idiosyncratic change or whether there are other “dollar” indications that support a possible breakout. This is especially true given what I think is causing the move in JPY, namely that “reflation” had been initially predicated on ideas of [...]

A Yield Curve Is Or Isn’t, There Is No Halfway

By |2017-02-06T18:22:48-05:00February 6th, 2017|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

As noted earlier, the Bank of Japan has a whole host of problems over its QQE with YCC attachments. Japan’s central bank has belatedly discovered Finance 101, where being one-dimensional doesn’t actually help the cause of “stimulus.” For far too long official policy has been lower, lower, and lower, whether that was carried out in JGB yields or whether it [...]

BoJ Bungles Rather Than Rebuilds

By |2017-02-06T16:09:02-05:00February 6th, 2017|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

The Bank of Japan had announced another acronym with which to add to QQE, a term that already includes an extra “Q”, on September 21, 2016. It was a bizarre engagement, like something out of a TV advertisement for laundry detergent or diet supplements where the central bank marketed the same QQE that you always knew and loved but now [...]

It’s Just Not ‘Reflation’ Without The Official, Groundless Upgrades

By |2017-01-31T18:55:03-05:00January 31st, 2017|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

The Bank of Japan raised its growth outlook, keeping monetary policy unchanged at its latest meeting. In the latest to be swept up in “reflation”, Japan’s central bank even trumpeted (pardon the pun) the expected Trump “stimulus” as a reason to be more optimistic. Why wouldn’t they? After all, there is no place on Earth that more appreciates government spending [...]

Data Tick In November TIC

By |2017-01-18T18:37:53-05:00January 18th, 2017|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

November was the month where global bonds, particularly sovereign bonds, were routed in synchronized liquidation. As such, we would expect to find among various data sources evidence to suggest a monetary “dollar” background consistent with that fact. What that has meant in the months (and last several years) leading up to it was the foreign official sector in overdrive “selling [...]

Currency Chaos (Con’t)

By |2017-01-17T15:58:12-05:00January 17th, 2017|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

There are a great many great things afoot, so it might be understandable some transferred excitement (or dread) into the realm of global currencies. The British are set to leave the European Union, though nobody really knows what that means let alone what it might lead to. While the US was closed for MLK remembrances, sterling was all over the [...]

It Was Never Numbers

By |2016-10-31T18:57:47-04:00October 31st, 2016|Markets|

Just over a week ago, the world (at least in chemistry) celebrated Mole Day. Rather than acknowledge the small underground mammal that immediately springs to mind, Mole Day is in honor of Amadeo Avogadro, the Count of Quaregna and Cerreto, who lived in the late 18th and early 19th centuries and contributed one of the major international base units in [...]

Admitting Wrong May Be Better But It Still Doesn’t Equate To Suddenly Being Effective

By |2016-10-25T16:57:42-04:00October 25th, 2016|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets, Stocks|

In early July, the Bank of Japan may or may not have contemplated the mother of all “stimulus.” Rumors began to fly that the Japanese central bank was, in fact, seriously considering an actual monetary helicopter as a way to boost flagging confidence rightly suspicious of any more QQE (or NIRP). We won’t know for some time (when the meeting [...]

One Possible Origin of ‘Something’

By |2016-10-06T18:21:45-04:00October 6th, 2016|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

If I was forced to guess what it was that specifically set off this “something” of growing “dollar” illiquidity since July, I would have to go back to the July 28 and 29 BoJ policy meeting. Initially, that was the decision that so disappointed at least against the backdrop of expectations of maybe the “helicopter.” But while the mainstream saw [...]

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