consumer prices

The Clowns Over The Corrupt

By |2018-07-20T12:28:13-04:00July 20th, 2018|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

The Bank of Japan is run by clowns. All of their major moves have blown up in their faces. The NIRP fiasco of January 2016 was one of the most stupendous moments of technical ineptitude ever displayed by a central bank; and that’s saying something, being able to choose from such a long and prominent list of monetary policy errors. [...]

Ptolemy Strikes Again

By |2018-05-31T11:23:45-04:00May 31st, 2018|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Perhaps it is revenge for 2015’s residual seasonality breakout. Or maybe it is just being celebrated as delicious irony. Did the BEA just take revenge on the Fed? In early 2015, first the Philadelphia branch of the Federal Reserve and then its San Francisco arm both published essays essentially accusing the BEA of being unaware of statistical defects in their [...]

All The World’s A (Imagined) Labor Shortage

By |2018-05-11T11:20:48-04:00May 11th, 2018|Commodities, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Last year’s infatuation with globally synchronized growth was at least understandable. From a certain, narrow point of view, Europe’s economy had accelerated. So, too, it seemed later in the year for the US economy. The Bank of Japan was actually talking about ending QQE with inflation in sight, and the PBOC was purportedly tightening as China’s economy appeared to many [...]

China Prices Include Lots of Base Effect, Still Undershoots

By |2018-03-09T17:04:12-05:00March 9th, 2018|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

By far, the easiest to answer for today’s inflation/boom trifecta is China’s CPI. At 2.9% in February 2018, that’s the closest it has come to the government’s definition of price stability (3%) since October 2013. That, in the mainstream, demands the description “hot” if not “sizzling” even though it still undershoots. The primary reason behind the seeming acceleration was a [...]

Inflation? Not Even Reflation

By |2018-02-09T11:20:30-05:00February 9th, 2018|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

The conventional interpretation of “reflation” in the second half of 2016 was that it was simply the opening act, the first step in the long-awaiting global recovery. That is what reflation technically means as distinct from recovery; something falls off, and to get back on track first there has to be acceleration to make up that lost difference. There was, [...]

Inflation Correlations and China’s Brief, Disappointing Porcine Nightmare

By |2018-01-10T18:16:02-05:00January 10th, 2018|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Two years ago, China was gripped by what was described as an epic pig problem. For most Chinese people, pork is a main staple so rapidly rising pig prices could have presented a serious challenge to an economy already at that time besieged by massive negative forces. It was another headache officials in that country really didn’t need. For economists [...]

From ‘Definitely Transitory’ to ‘Imperfect Understanding’ In One Press Conference

By |2017-12-26T18:01:15-05:00December 26th, 2017|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

When Janet Yellen spoke at her regular press conference following the FOMC decision in September 2017 to begin reducing the Fed’s balance sheet, the Chairman was forced to acknowledge that while the unemployment rate was well below what the central bank’s models view as inflationary it hadn’t yet shown up in the PCE Deflator. Of course, this was nothing new [...]

Two Very Different Monetary Cases, And Their One Common Theme

By |2017-12-13T12:21:13-05:00December 13th, 2017|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

When we look back at the period known as the Great Inflation there is a tendency, I believe, to truncate the episode only to the most well-known parts. What many people remember are things like gas lines, where oil problems and embargoes left Americans at several points in the seventies too often stuck for trying fill up their autos (or [...]

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