china

A Strong Indication of What Changed In January For the PBOC

By |2016-01-20T10:06:00-05:00January 19th, 2016|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

The official word from China, in the sense that whispers and unofficial back channels counts for any kind of imprimatur, was that last week’s huge surge in offshore yuan money rates was at the request of the PBOC using state banks to squeeze those damned speculators. It was perhaps an usual step to take in that the PBOC’s major efforts [...]

Coping and Denial; China and PBOC

By |2016-01-19T11:41:40-05:00January 19th, 2016|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

China’s economic update for December and Q4 were uniformly ugly. GDP fell to 6.8% and 6.9% for the full year. Industrial production was back below 6%, estimated at just 5.9% and once more denying all those that claimed November’s slight uptick was the start of renewal. Retail sales disappointed at 11.1%, down from 11.2% in November (no difference) while Fixed [...]

We Know How This Ends, Part 2

By |2016-01-18T17:25:55-05:00January 18th, 2016|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Part 1 is HERE. In March 1969, while Buba was busy in the quicksand of its swaps and forward dollar interventions, Netherlands Bank (the Dutch central bank) had instructed commercial banks in Holland to pull back funds from the eurodollar market in order to bring up their liquidity positions which had dwindled dangerously during this increasing currency chaos.  At the [...]

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 [...]

Not Only Is There No Inflation Anchor, Expectations Increasingly Suggest A Very Bleak Future

By |2016-01-14T16:35:38-05:00January 14th, 2016|Bonds, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

The US economy is supposed to be nothing like its Chinese counterpart, a sentiment that extends in the mainstream well past that into genuine surprise about how it would be possible US financial markets tripping over Chinese stumbles. Though the US might be fighting, too, a manufacturing slump that looks more like recession every day, convention still holds that the [...]

Asian Axis of Junk

By |2016-01-13T18:04:30-05:00January 13th, 2016|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

You almost have to marvel at the resilience shown in leveraged loan pricing over the past nearly month. Prior to the Fed’s rate decision on December 16, the leveraged loan market, as with the rest of the junk bubble, was sinking fast and furiously. Since then, however, despite great financial turmoil all over the world, and even in the places [...]

China Trade Following China Finance

By |2016-01-13T16:47:56-05:00January 13th, 2016|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Chinese exports in December were better than feared, declining by just 1.4% against some expectations for an 8% decline. However, there were significant questions in the data, starting with year-end contract projections, unverified accounts that don’t match other countries’ trade figures and the return of Hong Kong as a potential falsification point. As ZeroHedge points out, without the huge jump [...]

Chapter 2 In The RRP Fairy Tale

By |2016-01-13T15:17:36-05:00January 13th, 2016|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Behind our new paywall, I have been documenting the behavior of “dollar” money markets as they relate to China and elsewhere (global, general liquidity) but recent data in repo demand a more open airing. There are numerous indications that US$ markets are a total mess, none more so than repo. That starts with GC repo rates that remain above the [...]

War On Short Selling; The Last Hope

By |2016-01-12T12:01:12-05:00January 12th, 2016|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

If the PBOC was desperate last week, the catalog of words describing their likely stance this week is unbelievably short (pun intended). In the handbook of central bank operations, when conditions truly spiral out of control the first entry in that chapter says to blame speculators. Primary among them, subchapter one in the handbook, are the short sellers. If you [...]

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