banking

We Know How This Ends

By |2016-01-18T17:31:15-05:00January 18th, 2016|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

The finance ministers and representatives of central banks from the world’s ten largest “capitalist” economies gathered in Bonn, West Germany on November 20, 1968. The global financial system was then enthralled by a third major currency crisis of the past year or so and there was great angst and disagreement as to what to do about it. While sterling had [...]

Downward Spiral

By |2016-01-08T17:05:10-05:00January 8th, 2016|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Every once in a great while, you run into a mainstream article or news story that actually breaks through the thick cloud of conventional nonsense that passes for expert commentary. Despite clear signs about why people the world over should be worried about China, day after day we are told there is nothing to worry about. Their currency is in [...]

The Inescapable Trap of the ‘Dollar Short’; Japan as China?

By |2015-12-30T18:36:27-05:00December 30th, 2015|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Before World War II, in Japan there were four large conglomerates situated as vertically-integrated family-centered monopolies. Called zaibatsu, they were Mitsui, Mitsubishi, Sumitomo, and Yasuda, and many other smaller rivals. Each group would not just own companies in all industries, they would also organize and contain an assimilated banking concern (horizontal integration) to carry out capital and funding needs for within [...]

Money Market Confusion Is Really Standard Procedure

By |2015-12-21T10:57:11-05:00December 21st, 2015|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

When decrying the state of monetary policy that relies on essentially a “dead” money market, what does that actually mean? The FOMC, after all, is using the federal funds rate to “tighten”, ostensibly, even though there isn’t anybody there. They have developed other tools to go along with the federal funds rate, but all that does is highlight the central [...]

Europe Proves The Placebo

By |2015-12-03T11:29:17-05:00December 3rd, 2015|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Language itself being imprecise, it is often difficult to assign terminology that exactly fits the circumstances or processes being described. So often convention thinks and writes and speaks of monetarisms as if they were drugs like speed or heroin; the efficacious inducement toward uninhibited recklessness. Thus, “markets” are the addicts that only perform in the presence of the intoxicant. This [...]

Gold(man) Simplicity

By |2015-10-16T15:05:34-04:00October 16th, 2015|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Goldman Sachs just reported an extremely rough quarter, and not just for a bank that has earned a reputation as being on the “right” side of trading. The bank’s (and it is a bank, now) annualized return on equity put it next to BofAML and below Citigroup, of all indignities. The reason, as always, is FICC. Reported revenue there was [...]

QE One More Time; All Risk, No Reward

By |2015-09-02T17:23:26-04:00September 2nd, 2015|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

The re-crash of oil prices during the recent “dollar” wave/run were hard on almost everyone involved, economically and otherwise, but perhaps not more so than the ECB and its QE proponents. Despite being attributed with every minor upward move that could plausibly be assigned, for all the hype there has been very little actual movement anywhere of significance. The virtuous [...]

More QE Non-neutrality

By |2015-07-29T16:35:24-04:00July 29th, 2015|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

The simple narrative about QE is drawn from what is believed a simple process. The central bank buys bonds and by doing so it is simply assumed to be an “extra” bid on bond prices; therefore interest rates fall in whatever issue is being targeted by QE. Even in the US, QE has had trouble with that simple relationship. Instead [...]

There Are No New Banks; Dodd-Frank Hits Five

By |2015-07-21T11:12:11-04:00July 21st, 2015|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Today is the fifth anniversary of Dodd-Frank, the erstwhile government response to assure that the Panic of 2008 does not repeat. It was an ill-advised task to begin with as the panic itself took care of repetition. It is not, and never has been, past panic that should worry our future. Along with the legislation came the Consumer Financial Protection [...]

Still The Same Greece, Still The Same Math

By |2015-07-08T12:58:06-04:00July 8th, 2015|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

In April 2008, Nassim Taleb was becoming a household name criticizing the quant dominance in finance. Bear Stearns had just failed and the entire edifice of mathematical order was still breaking down, as the last bastions of credit default swap “supply”, the monoline insurers, were still rumored to be heading for insolvency (while the nightly news focused on whether that [...]

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