ben bernanke

What Flood?

By |2020-05-28T19:33:20-04:00May 28th, 2020|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets, Stocks|

Another 2.1 million Americans have filed this week with their state governments in order to determine their eligibility for unemployment insurance. That brings the 10-week disaster total for these initial jobless claims to an enormous 40.8 million. How did it get to be so many, and why, as states are opening back up, is it continuing in the millions all [...]

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 [...]

TED’s Not Dead Because Jay Don’t Pay, Just Like Ben Couldn’t Then

By |2020-04-24T18:36:58-04:00April 24th, 2020|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

It was chaos. Rumors of not one but two large European banks being pushed to the brink. Money market funds worried about breaking the buck rapidly pulling cash out from under any global name. The FOMC debating what would’ve been a repo-like bailout, even though $1.6 trillion of bank reserves had been “added” to the system. What was most damaging [...]

‘Something’ Sure Seems Off

By |2020-04-20T19:31:48-04:00April 20th, 2020|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

It seemed like an odd, counterintuitive market reaction to what was total chaos. First the news of Lehman Brothers followed closely by AIG, panic gripped every corner of the global marketplace. Toward late September 2008, the stock market would meltdown (the main part of GFC1 that most people associate with the term) in a wave of liquidations due to a [...]

The Two Easiest Dots Anyone Will Ever Have To Connect

By |2020-04-07T17:10:53-04:00April 7th, 2020|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Toward the end of March 2012, then-Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke was busy with so many things. It wasn’t supposed to have been that way, not after two “massive” QE’s launched in the wake of the Great “Recession.” After all, V-shaped recoveries provide their own momentum upon which central bankers might piggy-back. In short, there shouldn’t have been any questions [...]

Kittens Are Not Tigers, Bear Did The Dead Cat

By |2020-04-06T19:49:12-04:00April 6th, 2020|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets, Stocks|

On Tuesday, March 18, 2008, the S&P 500 big cap stock index soared. By the end of closing that day, the index had added 4.2%. Investors were increasingly optimistic that new kinds of “stimulus” which had been hastily introduced over the prior few weeks and months would provide enough of a boost so that the economic and financial downside might [...]

It’s Not About Jobless Claims Today, It’s About What Will Hamper Job Growth In A Few Months

By |2020-03-26T17:45:09-04:00March 26th, 2020|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

You’ve no doubt heard about the jobless claims number. At an incomprehensible 3.28 million Americans filing for unemployment for the first time, this level far exceeded the wildest expectations as the economic costs of the shutdown continue to come in far more like the worst case. And as bad as 3mm is, the real hidden number is likely much higher. [...]

Now You Can’t Spell C-C-A-R Without C-L-O

By |2020-02-10T17:32:21-05:00February 10th, 2020|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Everyone who lived through the Global Financial Crisis (GFC) remembers the Emergency Economic Stabilization Act of 2008, if not the name itself. The law had authorized TARP (among other things). It was passed during the messiest part of the panic, being signed into law on October 3, 2008. You can always tell what is not going to happen by whatever [...]

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